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Weekly Ohio State journal (Columbus, Ohio : 1841), 1848-09-13

Weekly Ohio State journal (Columbus, Ohio : 1841), 1848-09-13 page 1

WEf j 1 0 0 am 0 kNAL VOLUME XXXIX. VuuLISIIi:DEVKHFwtJ)NK.rtl)AY7r0UNINli UY Till! U.I, & RKKD. JIIic.B tho Journal Riiililini, iouIIi et cornet of High trust Mill Sugar nlley. VM, B. TIIIUTX AINU IIKM1Y IlKED, Editor!. T KR M : Tunr.K Dni.i.tns ?vn a mum, which mtjr b iltujw" by the payment of Two lloi.i.tx in lulvanca, nd froo ol poMauft, or ol" pnr cntiiKO to Airtinl" or Collector.. Tint Jnurunl ! " puuli.hed Daily and In-Weekly du rin the you; D.ily,poriiin,g7i Tri-Woukly,Jj. COLUMBUS, WEDNESDAY, SEP TEMBEK 13, 1848. NUMBER 2. MONDAY EVENING, BEP'I EHBER 4, 1H4H. Norwalk nnd Sandusky Hnnks. The Sandusky Clarion of September 1, aaya the reports of tho failure of the Norwalk and Sandusky Banks are incorrect; that tho notes of both Banks have, io fir as wo have heard, been promptly redeemed in specie, win-never presented " and odds thai the recent report ot the failure nf these Banks probably originated with dishonest brokers." Martin Van liuren. The fact that this gentleman ia now in tho field aia oandidatn for President of the United Sialea and that there are those who raft themselves Whig, and who, wi are bound in charity to suppose really think themselves Whigs, enlisted in hia aupport, are event well calculated in excite aurpriae. And the further (net lint hia claim ahould be urged upon tho American people aa the peculiar advocate of " free aoil " and the restriction of slavery, ia another peculiarity in Hit' affair which challenges admiration. Let u retrospect : In IH.12, Mr. Van Huron waa placed upon the tick el with lien Jackson, aa the candidate of that diatin-guiilicd champion of " free aoil" for Ihe Vice Presi (lency to which office he waa elected aaa reward fur liia aervility to Ihe " alnve power " nlid lo compeiiiale fur hia liavieg been recalled by the American Senate from liia mission to England, for having, while Secretary of Slate, given matructiona to the American Minister (here, derogatory to the character of nn A me rican eiliten. lie remained four lull yeara iii the of ficp of Vice President, during which time he gave hia casting title fir Ihe puisne of a law to authorizo every petty poil master wlioae overweening curioaily or villainoiia propenaity might prompt him to audi a count', to peer into the content of the mail, and ah-alract therefrom any newspapers, pamphleta ormaga-tinea which lie might suspect of being in favor of " free soil," and to limit audi mail matt r ! Tim ia one specimen of hia devotion to " free aotl, free speech, free press and free labor." luringall the lime he waa in Ihe Senate of the U Sialea while Gen Jackson's Secretary of State Minister to England and Vice President, hia views Up'n all topics at all connected with the subject of slavery, were an consonant with those of Gen. Jackson, aa never lo have awakened the least suspicion of hia fidelity to the South, in the mind of the meat wily and vigilant defender of the Southern "peculiar institution." Jn fact be supplanted even John C. C;ilhoun himself, in the confidence of Southern puliticiatia. And when transferred from a subordinate pott to that of President of the I'm led Statea, lie availed himself of the occasion of Ina inauguration, Ui advertise Congress that He Forbid the passage of any law touching slavery in the District of Columbia for lie would guard the " institution " there, like the apple of Ins eye ! In KWi, Martin Van Uuren waa elected President of Ihe United Statea ; and in I H (J he waa a candidate for re-election; and auch waa then liia devotion to the cause of "free toil" that Nkw IlArrsinnr. an It.. LIKOII WERE TUB ONLV HoK-fl.AVKIIo.HNO STATES ik tub Union Til T VoTKIl foK HIM ! While at the a m ue time, Virginia, South Carolina, Alabama, Missouri, and Arkanaaa found no acruplea al all in giving liim their support. The whole number of electoral votes cast at that election waa of winch Martin Van Uuren received precisely 6) and of these (j), twelve were from the free Statea and the remaining forty-eight from slave Statea. lie waa then backed by all Ihe forcu of a regular" nomination, and by the vast influence of the federal patronage. He now appears upun the lurf stripped of bolh these advantages.from this allowing tho honest enquirer may infer with a tolerable approximation to accuracy, what are tlie present prospects of a restoration of the Van Uuren dynasty ; and also the amount of advantages likely to inure to the cause of free soil " from such restoration, aupposing that were among the list of probabilities.The simple truth if, Mr. Van Buren is fallen man; and the etF .rl at present being made to raise him from hia low estate, is lo be regarded seriously only so far aa thai i-tf rl may contribute indirtrlly to the success of Gen. Cass, where a direct effort to that end would prove unavailing. Nothing that ia pros pec live and undetermined, we regard aa tnoro certain limn that either Zichary Taylor or Lewis Cass will, if they live until nell March, be the neit Preside nlnf the United Statea; and people are free to vote fir either nf these as ibeir judgments may dictate throw away their votes or uot vote at all- The alternatives are before them for their ehoice ; and while they are freo to make their seleo'ion, it were mere madness lor the in to endeavor to clunge the predicate. Van liuren aud liia Stuff. Among Ihe curious little circumstances attending the euifi change in Mr. Van Buri n's sentiments, and winch illicit be used in evidence, in case the sincerity of that ch inge is railed in question, is the fact, lint he has not co me to the tree Sil ranks alne. In Ihe days of Ins rampant Lsofocoisin when lord of the ascendant, lie gloried in that corruption by which and from which lie arose, he had a staff of LiithtuI tunueht, who breathed but in Ihe wind of his nostrils, and who wore by no other name thin hia it was Ina voice thai spoke in the House nf Uepresentativcs, in Ihe nceches of Churchill C. Cambreleng; and it was his doctrines that were promulgated in the resolutions of conventions reported by Benjamin K. Butler. I Mr. Van Buren h ia gone over to those against whom I liis bitterest wit fire waa ever directed; and he has not gone over alone. His favorite stuff, the promulgator of Ina written, and the declarer of his oral decrees are still by Ins sole. Still Ihe wordy oracles are pronounced by Ins Camhreli'iig, and the written pro-nanciamrntot are fabricated by hi Outlet, and these suspicious I'aekat of hit pro si. i very wars are now the chosen champions of that party which glories mosl in all that pertains to the racnhulury of fried m. Look nt the Other Side. If il was wrong in Gen. Taylor lo accept the nomination of tho meeting at Charleston, S C, what ahould lie have done t He fuse il lleject the nomination and refuse tho South Carolinians the privilege of voting for hull f Gen. Taylor waa already a candidate before the people the trkolt people uf the United Stiles ; and ho was so by his own consent. The nomination had been made by a Whig Convention and accepted, and the principles upon which his administration is lo be conducted, if he is elected, had been repeatedly declared Shall Ihen, Gen. Taylor refuse the soil rages of a part of that people be In re the For tag o County Whin." This is the name of a new paper, the first number of which waa issued at Kavenna, on Wednesday last, by J. S. Herrick, Esq. A paper which should make known truly Ihe position of tfie Whig party, ita ends and aim, was much needed in Portage county. The "Star" which has in years past illumed the path of W higgery, and battled atrungly against the abuses and corruptions of Van Bureniam and all other kinds of Locofokery, has dimmed its light in tho resplendent effulgence of the ButTato nomination ; and not only censed to be a faithful exponent of Whig ineaaurea, but lent itaelf to the task of decrying Whig men. Under Iheae circumstances, we greet with great satisfaction, the Portagt County Whig which promises to do good service in advancing the good cause in that portion of Ohio. Success to tho Whig and lo all true Whigs, in their laudable and patriotic efforts. " Liberty Equnlity Fruternity.' Weller sails the " free soil" folks "scurvy sheep" and Judge Tappan (says the Steubenville Herald) offsets this compliment by denominating the Weller party ' Whiskey Democrats." Correspondence of the Ohio Sin to Journal. Toi-Etio, Aug. an, leflS. Last night I attended a Free Soil, Barnburner Van Buren meeting, vol up for Ihe purpose of giving Charles It. Miller, President of the Toledo bank, an opportunity to flesh his maiden-sword in politics This young gentleman, who is a very clever man, gave his first vote in 1H-10 for Van Uuren, and changed from Locoloco to Wlnir in 1844, and is now airniu in favor ol electing Van Uuren m 14H. Su (hat he has ad justed Ins polilicnl cycle lo a period of four years. 3lr. Miller read to Ins suiheucc a labored speech, in which he showed Dial he had profited Home hy Ins four years sojourn among the Wings, and that lie had recently been also faiiiiliarizmir himself lo the dogmas of the Liberty party liul Hit) ease with which he mouthed the term 11 Democracy, showed too plainly the source of his first impresmotis The speech was an exceedingly long one, and was delivered in so unpleasant a lone (riot much unlike that of the Hell-man in I lie streets uf Columbun) that it would be difficult for a man of my nervous temperament to feel suili- ciently at eaae under such an infliction, to do justice itlier lo inn man or Ina production. 1 wilt tuereioro dismiss both with the single remark, that there was nothing new in the speech, nor any old ideas winch have not been presented in much more fiscilialing and striking colors. If Mr. Miller preserves this speech and Hhnll read it when he is some twenty years older, be will then regret that he was ever guilty of so much lolly and weakness, anil yet it is very etideiil mat he now regards il as an exceedingly able production, and will no doubt leel greatly disappointed il the great central managers of his new party associates do not print and circulate a lart'e edition ot it. What is to be the effect of I h is new parly ortfnnita-ti'n upon the Whig and Locofncn parties proper? Tins is a question which I do not intend an attempt lo aiiHiver; lor beating upon the outskirts of political in- tell'irence I can oulv g.itber items for use at Ihe great centre, where, by a concentration of fuels, something like correct conclusions can bo formed in regard lo tho probable grind resull. In this place the uarnhurners, nr 41 r ree Huil men as they call themselves, number about forty ; of that number seven have heretofore voted with the Wings, two of whmn may indeed yet vote with them. How many nf the original Loeol'ocoa may yet he induced to return to their old party, if any, cannot Ih known until the election is over. Tins much, however, ia, I think, pretty clearly established slready, that some of Ihe leading Burn burners are out and out hicufocut in itisgaite, secretly encouraging Ihe movement hr Ihe side purpose of inducing Iht dissalmfied Wfiigs'.o join their ranks, and when once thev shall have them fairly committed to the support of Van liuren. Will, With such ot their l.ocof.ico followers as they can control, willttlrate and chuckle over the success of their trick- Vo-morrow Ihe " Free Soil " party of (his Congress ional diklncl meet in Convention at Defiance, tor the purpose of nominating a candidate for Congress. It is said that John Fitch, su., will be their man. Yours, &c. Denth to the Democrutic Iurly -Gcn. Cnas. The following characteristic letter has lxen pub- halted in the A it ri Arbor True Democrat, a Barnburn er paiter. 1 he Detroit Advertiser says, "community was shocked tiy its publication and perusal. 11 II bus already been perused by most of our citizens with horror, but we give il a place in the Advertiser this morning, that the whole country may see what s dishonest, iuimoral aid rogut of a demagogue Lewis Cass is," Hero is me letter ; Washinoto!!, Feb. 1!, rM7. Mil Dear Sir Your friend Dovle will be selected as a Lieutenant, and I am glad we can give you tins proot ol a desire to piy respect to your recommenda tion. 1 am pressed to death by business, or 1 would write you a longer letter, however, Hie newspapers give you a full account of our strange proceeding. We have not done much good ; mil they say it is the darkest hour just before da) light, aud 1 am inclined to think that our darkest hour has past. It seems lo me that gooil is coining out of uiiKchief. There is a more de. leroiiued spirit to support the administration than I have seen heretofore. It ia now dmlniclly understood, anil it will be the true Democratic sentiment through the country, that everything must give way to a vigorous prosecution of the war, and thai no measures must be proposed (hat-will i-mhanafs the administration.The Wiliuot Proviso will not pass the Senate. It will be death to the war death to all hopes n gelling an acre of territory death to the administration, and death lo the Democratic party. Il waa not so intended Il no doubt originated with prop r fn-lings but things hive now come to such a pass, that its adoption will produce these effects. It is dilinclly avowed by the S ulhern members of Cong reus that they would not vote for any measures for Ihe prosecution of the war, nor would they ratify any treaty il tins pro. visem becomes a lit w. It will probably go bark Iroin Ihe Senate lo the Uuse, where 1 hope the appropriation will pass without any proviso. I am, with great respect, truly yours, II. S. Wiison, K-q. LKW. CASS. Was ever Ihe evidence of so much corruption of heart, and recklesouess of purpose, comprised in so few lines before? The morality of Santa Anna is "pure and undeliled religion " when compared With that which is evidenced in this letter of Lewis Cass. Only liMik al the reasons which he gives in the concluding paragraph for opposing ihe Wiluiot Proviso the rea sons why the Hiltnot Proviso will not pass the Senate, ojt would he death to the war death to all the Iiojk's of gelling an acre of territory death lo the administration, and death to the Democaralic par- There we find a man, occupying the position of an American statesman, deliberately avowing himself willing lo crush the fundamental principle of freedom itself for party purposes. Such is the plain implication ol the letter u II would be death to the Democratic party." But this is not all. " It would be death lo the war." Our eiluena must full by ihe thousand, eot otriiy Ihe Mexican's lance, or by Ihe more deadly Mexican chmaie, wives must be made widows, and children mul be made orphans all tins, according to Ihe morality uf General Cass, was belter than In adopt a measure which would be death lo the Democratic parly." And llns unprincipled old gentle man now asks the American pie to insult the memory of Gcnrgo Washington, hy placing linn in I ho chair once occupied hy the father of hia country. The utile nl government organ al Washington is becoming fierce in its attacks upon Martin Van liuren. Its leading editorial of Thursday, bearing Ihe caption of The Apostate," handles without gloves the former embodiment of Democratic perfection. The opening paragraph, which we subjoin, will serve as a sample of the spirit nf Ihe whole article : 11 We intend in sinp off completely the mask from the face of Mr. Van Buren and bis Barnuuruing chain- inons. I he duty is lorceu upon us tiy the crisis it TUESDAY EVENING, HEPrKMUEIl 3, 18-18. W The Ohio Statesman is informed that the Journal does not " bark out" from its statements in relation to Judge Dalzell, as is falsely alleged in that paper of yesterday. If the Statesman wishes to join issue with us upon the truth nf our statements, aud lo go to trial before Ihe public upon the testimony, we are ready. Nay, we will take the allirmaiive of the case, if the Statesman even will iutiuialo a doubt of its accurate and exact truth and fairness, Does the Statesman de sire lo be proven to be what every one already knows that it i f whole ol whom he stands acandid ite, and who ask ol i( , tlfl tTt) nl)ce mo'e nominated lo the high linn nothing but the privilege of voting fur him f No I est nltice in the world. His miserable ambition, and pledges are required, and the ftrat intimation he I its t'H more. Ins vindictive pamns, are despicable 1 , , . , i . . , -r, enough ; but il is the means which he employs which upon ihe subject is Ins unconditional nomination. I Ins i ' '. - I"1"""" ruic v.... .r. every honest mind. Il ia hia attempting lu gratify Ilia passuma at the expense nf his country ; and st the risk of disturbing the peace and even the union of Ihe Confederacy, he is attempting to build up a nor-Ikern nnrfi, mi sectional feelings and geographical ines. II is, then, time to expose nun in an me wiles On the Stump The old, tried and true Whig lead ors of tne Slate men, up to whom in limes of dark ness and peril the countenances of the Whigs of Ohio have ever been turned for counsel and for deliverance men, who have never faltered and who have never been suspected, whose history is not the history of a day, aud whose faith is no new chapter in a recent rev elation, are now before Ihe people doing strong ami ef. fective duty in support of Whig measures and Whig men. The people of Ihe State uf Ohio have heard ot Kwing, Corwiu, Vinton, Delano, Anthony, Hunter, Green, Mason, Collier, Goddard, Slanlon their voi ces will inspire courage, their words give confidence, and their reasons carry 'conviction. Krrnr is already falling before Ihem, and that truth which, although crushed never expires, is rising, healed of its wounds mid preparing for its day of glorious triumph. pKfiNsvi.vAfiiA Nominations. The Whigs of Erie Congressional District have nominated James Camp bell, Esq , of Clarion, ihe candidate for Congress Judge Thompson, of Erie, is the Locoloco candidate. The Erie Gazelle says Mr. Campbell is a popular nnd stun able gentleman, well known and much beloved at home, nnd will, we nro informed, command nn unusually strong vole there. He was supported for Ine o lice two years ago, under circumstances not calcula ted to inspire hopes of success, nnd it seems but just that now, when the prospect is more encouraging, he should receive the cordinl and active support uf the Whigs of the District. The Whigs of Beaver county have nominated Hon. John Dickey, Ihe present nble member from the XXih Congressional District, ft re-election. The District j is composed uf Beaver and Washington counties. Gubkiin ATottm, Nominations in Pknihyi.vasu. The Wing Stale Convention which met at Harrisburg, on the lllst ult., nominated without ballot, and by ac clamation, Wu F. Joiinton, of Armstrong county, us the candidate of the Whigs tor the office of Gov- rnor of Pennsylvania. The nomination was unani mous, aud has given great satisfaction to Ihe Whigs throughout the Slate. The Locofoco Convention which met on the 30th, alio, at Harrisburg, did not succeed on the first day in making a nomination On the second, after many bal- lottiiigN, Moulds Lonoatiiktii was selected as the can. didale by a small mnj trily. The correspondent of Ihe Philadelphia News, says " There is much dusntufac- lion expressed out of doors with the nomination of Mr. Longslreth, and he will, by no means, receive the united vole of his party." Miiuufuctured lor the Occasion Many tun s, w hen m emergency some article is re. quired to sub jrve a special purpose, it becuuiea a theme of recommendation to it, in ihe eye of both vender and purchaser, that it was " manufactured for the occasion." If it has been made with reference to the event which demands its use, it must, of course, be-peculiarly fit lo supply thai want in all ita features and aspects, The people of the Northern portion of the United State have, ol late, been supplied with an apt illustration of the above remark, in the person of one of the candidates for Ihe Presidency. The principles of candidate Van Uuren bear every evidence of having been miitmj'iicturrtl far the oecanion. The gloss of newness which rests upon the article, attests the recency of its manufacture ; ami Ihe completeness and promptness with which it comes Umn the market to supply an ex , isling demand, is conclusive evidence thai Ihe ingo- j nious inventor had the prescience lo foresee that de-1 mind, and th enterprise to provide that his comiuodi- j ty ahould be a complete answer to it. And the hawkers of the Free Democracy, whenever they recommend their candidate to the support of whomsoever it may concern, do not fail to expatiate upon the novelty of Ihe invention an ) the value of the patent; aud ttiis new element in the qual lies of an aspirant to office, is expected to be as effective in procuring his acceptance by the people, as il is in the case of the last patent beehive, chum, washing machine, or straw-cutter, or anything else thai is got up to save labor, make tho fortune of the inventor, or gull the poor unfortunate that invests his capital m its purchase. $11,1100 We have not been as yet able to learn, that Col. John It. Weller, late a brave volunteer in Mexico, and now Elocutory candidate for the office of Governor of Ohio, regul irly nominated by the Loco-Democratic patty, ha made any provision for the payment of Ihe small balance due from him to the in a aury of Duller county. If he ahould do an, we ahsll take great pleasure in announcing il immediately. IP The thing is being done in Ihe Slate of Ohio. We shall shortly have iioihiu more to complain of in regard lo the ap tlby of the Wtt,'s. They are coming up to the work and lending their energies to secure a thorough organization We are neither to be delivered bound into Ihe hands of a revoiiioiiary commillee. nor consigned lo the disgraceful limbo of subserviency to the fortunes of Gen Cass. The exertion of such men as Ewing aud Corwiu, and Delano, and Walker, and Green, and Cary, are wakng men up to a sense of their danger and their duty, and like the sounding of I r ntnpets in preparation nf battle are railing Ihem hack to their ranks nerved for the combat and with the assurance of victory. DltAINAttB of Tim Citv Its NlCFSSITV We call the notice nf Ihe readers of the Journal today, to the coniinunioittion of an able nnd learned correspondent, upon the aubjt-cl ol a seasonable provision against the ravages of Ciioi.nu, by a suitable attention to pub ic cleanliness. Tin Onto Mkimcai. ash Si hoicai. Joi iihai., f.', itrd bij John Bcttkhfiku, M. D. Calumbtu,J. tl. II tit if a Co., September 1. We have had placed in our hands by the publisher!, the first number of a bi-mint hi if periodical hearing the above title, edited hy Professor Butterheld, of the Starling Medical College ol tins city. The outward appearance of ihe Journal ami ita general execution are exceedingly good, and ao far as we are aide lo judge, itsootiteiils are lo an equal degree interesting and valuable.The first thirty nine pages of the work are devoted to original articles from the pens of Drs. Howard and Marney of Columbus, Professors Gihbs of Willuiighby, and Jinlkins of Cincinnati, and Dr. Cately uf Delaware, aud Ihe remainder is filled with valuable articles selected from the wide field of medical literature. Having read a portion of (he artiales, we beg leave to say here, thai while we cannot doubt but the Journal will he looked upon by the profession as a valuable addition toils literature, we see no reason why it should Kohhkrv. Charles T. Artlnir,acoltle drover from Madison county, Ohio, was robbed by two ruffians near Newport, in Shelby county, Ohio, on the llth of August last, in the evening. He received a shot through his vest and shirt, also stab from a dirk, the dirk only inflicting a slight wound. The rntliaus having cut the reins of his bridle, his horse sprang from under him ; they then gave him a heavy blow on Ihe head, which rendered him senseless, and robbed him of his money, $l,G.'!j Two men have been arrested on auapicion, bul discharged fur want uf evidence. Mr. Arthur ia an elderly man, was unwell at the time, and on his way home. He has been confined to his bed with a fever up to this time. Comm. Railroad from Dayton Wkbt. The Cincinnati Gazelle says ; Our friends at Dayton have a greatgo-a-headitivcneis. They have organized a Railway Company to bring into that city the Indiana trade and travel, and directed a survey to be made. Their efforts are very commendable, and ahould admonish the good people of Cincinnati to see to the completion of the Hamilton road, and lo have it pushed on to Indiana. Qj Sitmuet Medary's manikin who writes editorials in the Statesman, is of the opinion that Gen. Taylor doea not much resemble Gen. Washington; and an haa ho recorded it in half a column of balderdash in that paper of yesterday. The histories of those two great men are very similar in one respect : They have been abused by a great variety of mean fellows, who in so doing, have exhibited nothing ao plainly as their own hnpoiency am) vilenss. Tiik Union Givks it Up. The Washington Un-ion makes an ettimate of Ihe States Cass will get, and mi I a down Ohio and South Carolina, which make up the sum of l'i,i, seven more than a majority. The calculation of the Union is a virtual acknowledgment that ('ass has no chance, The hero of Hull's surrender lias no more prospect of carrying Ohio than he bus of receiving the electoral vole of Kentucky. C'oNHFquKNcr-a of V orif.a Fhkk Soil. Since the lectmu of IfUl, when Abolitionism annexed Texas, made us guilty uf the crime of war, entailed upon as a national debt, and sowed the seeds of disorder and disunion, there has been no more strikitigexeinplHication of the evils remitting from the Free Soil organization than appears in the late election in Iowa. The Free Soilers in Des Moines county, at the sug gestion of some shrewd Cass men, ran an independent ticket for the Legislature. 1 his ticket received about 101) votes, and thus threw th" choice of a Senator and four Itepr-'sentalives into the h tml of tin Lcofocos, as intisl have been foreseen Tint Springfield Republican snys ; " The votes of these ue'll will probably secure the election of two Cass Locofocos to the U. S. Senate." The Free Soilers doubtless glory in the deed ; the country Ihe ' oppressed and down trodden," suffer the consequences. The Marine Srhvicf.. A board ia now in session in Washington, il is said, for Ihe discharge of 4 captains and -I first and -I second lieutenant from the ma-rine force -the whole number of men being now reduced lo'j.:i:i:t, what it wsn the !iud of March, r47. The duty of the board is to examine the claims and services of each oHiccr, and lo ascertain who are Ihe least meritorious. Honors to Gr.s. Wool,. An immense gathering of the citizens ofl'roy,New York, aud of that portion nf the State, took place in th it city on the UilU ult , to do honor to General Wool on his return from Mcx- Addresses, processions, military reviews, and the presentation of a sword, were among Ihe ceremonies ol the occasion, the Troy papers speak of the proceedings as exceedingly brilliant. Jj' Messrs. Chase, Vaoghan, and Briggs, having "stumped the Reserve," have g me gone over into " Macedonia," to help ihe people of the Peninsular Stnte. They were advertised at Detroit on the 1stinstant. Whether their exertions in that Stale will have a tendency to secure its vote to General Cass, wo have no means of knowing, hut probably nut. That (heir labors in Ohio have a ded Ihe pretensions uf that gentleman, we have no doubt. (U A ainall boy in this cily was yesterday snapped at and bitten hy a dog, under circumstances calculated lo induce the belief that if not decidedly mad, he must have been very much mil of patience. Tho child is al large, and so is the d'-g. Art. Riiiiit. Divid Fndieraud J M Williams, the unsuccessful candidates for nomination to Congress in the second District, are exerting themselves in support of the Wing ticket, Taylor and Filhuor?, Ford and Campbell, Aa. LT There are rumors ot an extensive fire at Bury-rns on Friday last, winch is said to have destroyed several stores and a large amount of property in the business pari uf the town. We have, as yet, learned no particulars. V'otks ar tiii way, in MiciimtN A vole was taken nn the cirs upon the Central Railroad in Michigan on the ;i th ult., winch resulted as f dlows ; For Taylor -III; for Cass!); For Van HurrnS. upon the subi nomination he accepts aa unconditionally, Why umi'd he not? Aud if he has not done right, what should he hive done ? It is far easier to find fuill with a man's course than it is to pomlout a better one. D" We reply In the Cleveland True Democrat, thai we knew of the existence of the following resolution when we charged the Free Moil men with having dropped abolition in Ihe District of Columbia from; their creed : j Rttolnd, Thai il ia the duly of the federal government lo relieve itself from all responsibility for the existence nr continuance "f slavery w herever that govern nl possesses constitutional authority to legislate on I hat subject, and is thus responsible for ils existence.Thie resolution requirea rontlruttia before it means what the Democrat saya it doea ; and that ia what we complain of. The whole trir ia Van Buremsh, snd may mean something or nothing, just as the fntu-e exigencies of Ihe parly may seem lo require. The very gloss which tho Democrat puts upon the resolution shows that il Is not clear. No one iat by it, bound lu do anything. Oen. A. Anderson, formerly a Demoerahe U. S Senator, from Tennessee, and who has, until recently tried with that party, has come out m favor of Gen. Taylor for the Presidency. and doublings of hia character, and show the people whose suffrage he is soliciting, what manner of man he is." The free soil Whigs of Western New York will not be seduced from their allegiance by the new 1 an 11 ten tomertrt 'I he Rochester American thus teahlies concerning Mourn county : "We have reliable advices from all parts of this county winch concur in the statement that very few indeed of the Whigs will withhold their support from Gen Taylor. In one or Iwo localities some disslfeo-tion has iieen nurtured by considerable effort on the part of the Barnburners, bul when it comes lo voting fr Martin Van Buren, the dse is much loo strong for W lug stomachs, nn art t form fit t ram alt quarter that lien Taylor will gain largtltf Jram Ms rankt of th Loeofiirot." Tnr Sandi'bkv Bnk Panic We understand that (he messengers sent up to Sandusky by some of our nty brokers have returned. The Sandusky nles are redeemed on demand. We hear nothing more to discredit the Norwalk llsnk, and all is qniei in relation to the Clinton Hank of Columbua. C'ntrianolt OauUet Sept, I EU The Anniversary of the K ittle of Bennington waa observed hy the citiiena of Vermont, upon the ground, with appropriate cere m"iuea. Tiif. S i a k k A in tiik Woonr r.i k v u. We have noticed in many places, a very wicked and very unprofitable practice, vil: lio s or men standing sentinel in orchards wilh a gnu hootutg wuodfeckera. In any country, snd particularly in Hits, where ore bur if are so poorly taken care of, the wnmp.ckcrs are of great advantage in the way of killing ins cts and wrm. Il was once thought tint thce birds picked into the Irilil tree for the purpose of getting the sap; if thai was the ease Ibey could find trees in our woods of native growth, containing sap much more pul.ilahle than can he found in our orrhnrds. The fjet is, they hunt after and destroy tnurh of the vermin that infest, and in very many casea kill, our most valuable fruit trees. When there are orchards very much infested wilh worms, the woodpeckers in all prohabdily cannot save it, hut doubtless (hey have saved many an orchard hy devouring the worms and insect lie t-.re they became mine nms. They are Ihe open enemies nf all llnxioua reptiles. Not long ago we Were riding by an orchard, and our alt- niiuii hub attracted by Ihe incessant clatter ot' some two or three dozen of these s.ipsuckers. We knew from the nature of the birds (list something unusual must he going on, and we hitched our horse and proceeded cuii-tioimly to the spot. On coming near we discovered a child, a bltle girl, asleep, we could hear oilier children nl a distance at play. On getting still closer we saw Ihe cause of Ihe buds' uneasiness; Ihere, within three feet nf the innocent one, lay coded up nnd striking at the birds sj they pounced down upon bun on every side, a large venomous serpent : we procured a large stick, and unperceived got a stroke al hmi,aml following it up with others soon dispatched him. The child had been at ptay with Ihe r-st, and becoming weaned, hail laid down and fallen anlorp Rut i ?tn on a II u i. Our city is full nf delegates representing Ihe Iwo Railroad moles Irmn this to Co lumhus. 'fhe strong men of ihe principal (owns through which Ihe routes pasasre hen lo presi nl their claims and oiler their inibieenienla in the way of increased subscriptions. Tins day was set apart by the directors to decide the line lite eastern or Ihe wes- nolalso be exceedingly interesting to the general rea- tern mule It may n be decided in diy.nsMr Kel- der ley, the Presnleni, is blork-ob d at Sandiuky, (the on- The labors of the Editor appear to hive been per I ly ual oral harbor on hake Erie,) and may not reach The I lurry at Albany. Like all premature movements excited by false information, when fully exposed by time and truth, tho treacherous sttempt upon Gen. Taylor in the Stale of New York, which produced the demonstration at Albany, is likely to end in adding strength lo Hint pa'iy which it was intended to destroy. Tho sober second Ihouglit of the good and true Whigs of Albany had its namrnl and legitimate effect, and so far from any force : being lost to Gen. Taylor, all accounts concur in showing that a gain has been realized, and a consolidation ol the party has been effected. Tho Albany Evening Journal, and tho correapon-dence of the New York city papera concur in npre-aentiug the adjourned meeting aa very spirited and harmonious. The New York Express says : The hall waa densely crowded, and the Whigs do-rived new euihusiaaiu from the temporary check inci-dent to the last ill advised, or umdviivd meeting, held on Saturday evening. The half hour speech of Mr. Collier, and the speeches of Messrs Wheaton, King of Geo , Kenselaer, were all eloquent and well received. We ve tho report as it was read, and received with every demonstration uf satisfaction by the meeting : n REPORT. The committee, to whom was referred the correspondence between Mr. Prinze, as chairman of a Tny-lor meeting in Charleston, S. C.aiid Gen. Taylor, respectively report, " That they have given the subject their careful and deliberate consideration, ami are led to believe that the respectable meeting, by whom your committee were appointed, have acted under some inisaiiiiielieu- sion as to the position assumed by Gen. Taolor in tins Correspondence. Il seems to have been stippnurd that tins nomina tion, communicated in the Pnugle letter, and accepted by Gen Taylor, emanated from a Whig ineeimir. who had repudiated the nomination of Millard Fillmore, our candidate for Vice President; and under that mi ssion, it might well be expected III it auch an acl of supposed treachery, on the part nf Southern Whigs, would hive provoked the just indignation of the Wings of the North, aud particularly of Ina friends and fellow Whigs in his own Stale II turned out, however, that Una nomination ,f Taylor aud Butler, in truih comes Iroin a body of seceding Locolocot, who have very properly discarded their own candidate, lien Cass, and put a better man in his place ; and thai Gen lay lor, in his answer, while he accepts Ihe nomina tion, professing on its face to come from the " Democratic citizens of Charleston," expressly tells them, uis aeceptiince is " without nledifi's or conditions. Your committee do not see m this letter of General Taylor, anything iiicnnmsLeul with the course he has uniformly pursued, and he was nominated at the Whig National Convention, with full knowledge of (he posi tion lie thus occupied. . If tins movement had pro. eeeded from seceding Whigs, who h id abandoned Mr. Fillmore, and rel'u-rd lo suppert him. it would have presented a verv different qu.-stioii. But we uifisl do Ihe South-m Wings the justice to say, lhat, so far as we are inlormed, they huve throiiLrhout anted with perfect good faith towards Mr. Fillmore ; and their wing hiuiiiTS aie nil, without a mule exception, hi scribed with the nim-'S nf "Taylor and Fillmore" tei not the Whigs ol .Vvr York Ihen. set the examine hid faith, who'll thev h ive been so e.nrer to con- de , in the mere anticipation of (hat disaffection which now proves never to huve existed among the Southern Wings. South Carolina housis of never hiving given anything hut a D'-mocrnlic vole, in thirty I ynnrs. "e Hive always conceded the vole ol that1 State to Cms and Butler Shall we out ourselves in a pisoon if Taylor shall help us lo a s,dil ticket in that Slate ? On ihe coutnry, ought we not to rejoice nl it, and he glud to compromise for such a vole i 1 our cooiMiitlee deem it the imperative duty of all Northern Whigs, and particularly of the Whigs of New Yom, Wtio have In en favored Willi Ihe nomina tion of a candidate from their own Slate for Vice President, to support mi good faith the nominees of the I'hihidelpln i Convention We are now to choow Ih-tween Taylor and Fillmore on the one hand, and Cass and Bjtler on the other. We all had our prel'i-renres, and our favorite cumlidates, for the nominations We hive many of us been gnevomly dinappomted in the remit. Hot Tivl-ir nnd Fillmore are now Hie onlv candidates of the Wing pirlv, and we surely ought not to hesitate to give that ticket our united support So long sn tlie higs of I he S .ul fi are true lo us, let us, without (littering, be true to Ihem "Your coiiimiiti-e hive, upon full consideration, unanimously agreed to submit tnd recommend lo tins meeting, tlie following rcnm j-m : " HiMolml, Tint the forih-T consideration of this subject be referred to the Wing State Convention, and tint we will cordially support the electoral ticket which that convention shall nominate. " All which is respectfully s ibmitted "John A Coi.i.iih, Fhanhi.in Townsf.nd, StMtKi. Hr;vr.Hs, Whmav ( i h '. k n k , II. A. Wii.imu, H ft. :Usw.i.i., ClUKI.ES S. Ol.SSTClJ, II G. WltkATON." Uniting the Free Democrat Nominations. Ihere are Ihise who stdl persist m remembering Mirtin Vim Buren as he was. T' men whose minds are clear and wh mo mem tries are sound, the lapse of ight years fi ts not obliterated Ihe record of the char ges which were op-nly proclaimed, of lh fra ids and crimes which were conclusively proved against hnn. I hese Dungs .ill stand mic mfcsjed, unrepealed of, tin atoned for. Thrown from h.s otfiae by the sciive in iignitioii of the p'ople, in the form of the worst and ui"t disgraceful defeat ever exHnenced by mortal man, he d es nol even ftrafrtt to hive changed in re sped of a suilrf practice, d iclnne or opinion. He is Mirtin Van Buren sill ; now, as ever, the bare. faced rider of the latest hobby tint cunning navigator who trims his sail to every popular mirreiti the migicun who trauslorms huuiell and yet remains the same. Whether the attempt to infnie galvanic life into a subject a ietr-ctiiiliy deadened, and ao justly aa was tliriin au tturen in lilit, is destined lu be success ful, is yet t ilwdom insir ited. Thai some who were Xecled tosustiut (he B.itfilo nominations are unable. now lluse nominations are mule lo do so, is becoming daily apparent. The following extract from a let-ler from Mr Siiaitxr, Ihe Secretary of State in Vermont, who was supp led lo be irrevocably committed to ine rree boil orguiixait m, exhibits, in g d set terms, his portion and doubtless Dial of thousands n others : I cannot bring myself to support a man for Press, dent who nif, rs m-iiner apology ,ur conlewiou fr hn pisl elf iic.ea, and who ha done more than any other iinn living, lo foster tint api-u of hold aggression on the pari of Slavery, winch annexed Texas lu ns iu lion, wilh all its coni qneiit evils. To eleri M trim Van Hunm, would be to reward Ihe whole band of minrnicioled men who. in InlJ ... .. menied the eilenl uf Slavery lu the lit t nf ttn-ir power, and brought upon us an unnecessary and bloody war, Icriinmtiiug at lnt in digging a pt o de-true i, from winch nothing but Ihe wnest ami .!, est of counsel can rescue us. Ttn re are niber and decisive reasons against Mr Van liuren His ps,lmii relative t Slavery itself, is entirely unsound, lie is against its talargrmmt, (ml can well tolerate the erittrnrt of il, in cases where Ihe same power is admitted lo exist or Us pri-veiHem and destruction. Further, he esnuoi be elected by the re-Miu is quite eviilcnt ; either Uem ral Daniel Webster out for Taylor. We take Ihe following from ihe telegraphic intelligence of iho Cleveland Plain Dealer of the 3d. It givea Ihe gratifying intelligence that anothor tried and trusted Whig leader has spoken out in terms that can neither be mistaken nor misconstrued, as to where ho stands, aud why he 1(,lds lin position : Nkw York, Sept. S-3 P.M. Mr Webster made s speech nt Mnrslilield yesl-rday and avowed himself fully and decidedly in favor of the election of Geri. Taylor, whom he considered fairly nominated. He did not believe that slavery had anything lo do with his nomination that the South waa noi accountable tor il. 1 he Iree States had sixty majority in Ihe Philadelphia Convention, and, if united, could have nominated who they pk-ascd. He consid. ered Hie contest for the Presidency lay between Taylor and Cass. Vnn Buren's past course he strongly reprobated, and said what was good ui the Unlt'ilo pi tit-form, the Whigs had always advocated, and lhat there were Whigs at the Ilulf ilo Convention whom he highly respected, hut he doubted the policy of the nomination of Van Buren. He held Cass to be the most dangerous man in the nation he was the embodiment of the war spirit he opposed Ihe treaty nf Washington he was for the whole nf Oregon. The mutter never could hove been peaceably negotiated if he (Cum,,) could have had hif way. He was for conlinuimr the Mexican war lie is all for war. Now, said Mr. W., we are to choose between Cass and Tavlor. One or Ihe other will bo lected no one else. It is to bo Tavlor or ( Inns Oen. Taylor has I u fairly nominated by the Whig Con vention e is a Whig. If I believed him, concluded Mr. W ,to be for war, or for tl xteusion of slavery, I should oppose hia election. I believe him to be in favor of neither. For Hie Ohio Stutu Journal, Chole.ru. Mkssrs. Editors : 1 have thought that even if it produce no very sensible elf-el, a tew remarka upon the great epidemic of (he llhli century might not be unacceptable to your readers. We taunt find leisure sometimes to think aud acl upon other questions thin mere p oincii ones, and experience w.ll, it may lie, teach us thai there are others of some importance. Alter slumbering soiling; in Russia, us to give us hopes liul it had breathed Us lat, the cholera is again on its fearful march. The central, and ere llns probably the Western portions of Furope, urn subject to its ravages. In nil human prohibility it will again cross the Atlantic, and ere another year Ins passed be once more m our miiUl. Columbus was severely V's-iled during the Ust epidemic and may be ajraiu. No losrtntine or cordons can check its progress, and we must prepare lo meet it n well us we can. What thult ire au ' To answer briefly this question is the main object of this coiiiuiunication. Though the cli'dern is olien-times exceedingly capricious, in Us march, and prevails occasionally iu the heiiltlnest situations, it is nevertheless true as a general proposition, thru it follows the same general course, and is amenable to th- nme laws of diffusion, as other epidemics. The British Com "'" era, appointed with direct reference lo the ex- peeled anproach of Ihe clrdera, iu lln-ir recent report say, that " the disease which may be taken as the type of the entire elms of euideunc dieast-s that infest ibis Bomitry ia typhus fever, Mm. fever ) The hshetat of typhus ia that of ihe class; and (be conditions which favor the ipread of llns disease, and which convert it into a pestilence, and those which locale to a very great extent in these very plice all other pestilences that come, and which give ihem ih-ir fearful fatality, are, na lar as we nave any knowledge of them, pre cisely Ihe Mine." Ivw. dark, damn, iHv ventilated houses, crowded cellars, stagnant courts, all (end to produce ty phus, and all invite and aggravate cholera. Tlie ship ttver which co iiontted such terrible hi von in our emigrant ships last year, ia scarcely s-en this, solely on account of ihe rigid eiil'.rceuient of the pmeiig.-r lnu which require venlilhlion, Mriet rlennlim-ss, aud a certain mi. uber of cubic feet for each passenger. The same principles are Irue everywhere, and we have the gral lying assurance that while we are endeavoring lo mo led ourselves from one disease, we place ourselves ui the most favorable condition lo resist all. Lest llns communication should extend itself lo loo grral a length, I will confine myself now to those sanitary measures winch should bL adopted by us as a citv, leaving individual precautions fur a future paper, nr lube inferred. Columbus is not a filthy city. We have but little of thai excessive crowding sod ebject novertv found in Kuropeau, and to noiue extent in our Kasternciiics Our foreign population, as well as native, suit'-r l ut tt'tle fr cold, or damp, or want .Now and then us everybody can aee, there is a dwelling crowded, close and dirty enough in contaminate a whole neighborhood. A Board of Health,"' composed o men who know something of the Jaws of health, snd the sanitary measures su successfully adopted elsewhere, should th' eleeied every year, and sustained in the fun hi ii I d'sclnr.,' of ttnir duty. Bol I wish especially locill the attention of our cit-ixe ns lo another great sanitary measure of more importance thin everything else, and until the adoption of wlneh, many port four city will be almost tie. cessitnly unhealthy; I allude to a regular system of drainage. Those who hive paid no attention In the subject, are noi aware how much depends upon (Ins. Without it London was almost d- p 'poUlrd every few years ; with it London has become as healthy as any city of its sue can w. ll be. The nrf.il o a single family, if allowed to collerl and aecuiilillale, Will poison the air for a considerable dislance. and nothing contri butes more In comfort, as well as to health, than its prompt and complete removal Many ol our families hive no drain hut Ihe street gutter, aiid, with the best disposition to b neat and cleanly, are a perfect nuisance to ibeuiselves and lo each other. A projeet is on fool, and we hope it will lie successful, to provide a quiet and beautiful resting place for the dead. Tina is well, bul I do insist thai if we can do but one, we sli uld tit-sl provide for Ihe health and comfort of the living Provide means for the thorough draining of every street, aye, nf every house in Ihe city, and compel every family lo use them, and Green Lawn Cemetery will be cheated of many a victim; and for myself I would ri'her be instrumental in bringing about auch a result, thin lo sleep under the proudest inomrne nt that art can renr. A common sewer should piss either the length of Fourth street or its neighborhood, north and south, or probably belter still, a unny as are necessary irotn Sixth sired, or thereabouts in tin river, pa-smg under High street A l-1 tT descent could be obtained in tb s way, aud Bide drama could be let in from every street and into these from every house. 1 do n il suggest this as the lh-t plin, but In give our cilil-'iis something to think of. A caicfol survey should of course In mule. If the importance of (he subj. ct w-re properly under-toml, a special lax Would at once lie laid and cheerfully pud, and the work entered on before another week hid pissed. Our slreels are wide and airy aud we have but little, couipirativ. lv, lo do If these s igfestmns are acted on, sml if individuals will consult mote than tle-y now ifo the p-Mir.-ples ol's.-ieiiee in Hie construction of their dwellings, we should soon rvap the betn His in a unrk-ed diminution of sickness of every description Tho' these measures might seusdily d nisli our business, I sssiire you lie ir consummation would atfurd sincere gratification to at least one PHYSICIAN. Knurl the New Voik F.ipress, A Tnlk to Sincere Whig. Ni w York, Aug 3-1, S. The antiearanee of Mr Van l!,ir..i.'. i..n..r r. n lor must he elected bv the -tee tor it I oi,ll...n. or b excuse lor a few words on ibti i. ...... l it. Cast Will be chosen by the House ol Rcpr-sentalivca words" because, although the teller IS exceedingly Pins I consider ihe greatest evil that could "all upon I wordy, ils art aud delusiveness can be exposed in a few the country. The success of himself and pirty will seiib nces. give us Slavery throughout th,. conquered porinma of I II ia enough to say to Whigs that Mr. Van Buren Mexico, lor a lime we cannot foresee, a general svs advances Homing, nf tnslorv. annnm-iil. or anneal, in lem ol misrule a farther prostration of free labor illustration of tne design of the trainers of our Com ui snort, we 1(11111 receive Iron il the twin plagues, Slavery and Modern Progressive Democracy. I cannot consent in llns crisis In wile even mm ' me " peculiar institution . in support of Ihe power of Congress over Ihe slave question in Ihe territories, or in behalf of a resolute resistance to formed with much ability. Although he con testes tint he docs nol feel altogether at home, we must adintllhat we see no evidence of the want of a home feeling except in the confession itself; for toils Ihe pages Which are the products of Ins nvrn pen, are among the uioit interesting of the whole. F.ach number of the Journal ia lu contain ninety six pages, and it isntfi'red to subscribers at the very moderate rate of two dollars per annum, in advance. Cnsi Ihe Toetutitler. Commodore Klholl, the commander nf the U. 8. ship Constitution, in the Mediterranean, addressed a letter to Gen. Cass, then at Paris, on the eve nf Ins commencing his lour lo Greece, Fgypl and Ihe Holy Land, on board thai ship, aud al the Government expense, which contained the following; " As to wines, I have directed at Ibis plare, one cask of Sherry and one cak of Madeira: Ihe Cham paigne and the other French wines yon mm torn, will best come from Marseilles." Gen. Cass manufactured whiskey tntrlt. e never lasted arrfrnf tointt in Ina life. I he wine, no doubt, was for sickneiB; and lie must have expected In be rrryxt'rA, judging from the quantity of mrrfirinc lie laid in. t say ; here before to-morrow. Bul when the decision is made, then ch ar Ihe track ! The contract to build Ihe road, grading, laying down the iron, furiiMiing csrs, locomotives, &o , Ac, is already made, nnd a company from Ihe enst ahuudantly able to do it, are under liotiils lo complete me nn no in rwo Vftrt. I here ia no misuse- anoui uiisi Again we clear the (rack !" Cierthnid $rpt I. 1 NTKFFiniTV or A Lht A remarkable instance of intrepidity and coolness was exhibited t Ihe Blue I ,iclt Springs, a lew tin s ago, ny ,llss L , a belle of Bourbon connlv in this Slate. Miss L and Mr. V . a gentleman from the South, on tin ir return from an excursion on borsebnek, were riding down the long bill about a quarter nf a mile from the hotel, t full speed, the lady being a little ahead. At a sudden turn of the road, the gentleman's saddle turned, and he fell from his horse, but his foot remained in the stirrup, and Hie horse, although Ins pace was somewhat slackened, kept on his way, dragging Ihe fallen man upon ihu ground. The young ladv, seeing tins, reined in her own horse by a sudden ell'rt, Icupcd from hm, whilst In was still in rapid motmn, ran haek,seticil the oiher horse by (be bridle, and released her gallant from his perilous aitunli m This feat was witnessed br hnndredsal the Springs, whofloiild find no words strong enoiiyh to express their admiration of the during conrage o the beautiful young heroine. LmsurWc Journal. vote Ihe it me reason which impelled me lo v Me I H xWnsion o humsn bondage, wlneh dues li"l b.f Mr. I lay, are equally binding u .w, and unerring- j i'h a cordial response from tint Wing parly with ly o support the nomint f (he V big pilty. j Vthoin Ihe lion extension of sltvery his ever been a As an anli. slavery man, and an aiioliimnisl, I do cherished p obey Nonot a tie. iijht iiol one ! Oar tmt perceive how 1 can belter aid the gn at cause of ( Views and teachings on this question hive ever been hum in liberty, Hun by assisting topr,iinic the chain j sound, conservative, cimcilnl .-ry. I be rr of S,,Hlk-perns nf its gn at aiitagmiiii. tn ii. nl Taylor is a i e rn Uaig in Me Hunt of li iTt$itHtiri on the V. slaveholder; beyond this whatever is known of hnil ; ate 1 ompmmttr, W, is worthy n renewed attention 111 a to Ins advantage. 1 order hoti.even with this lib.i to any Northern dougliLtee trusting In U admitted j iiilegnty as a man, ami more eapeeuilt I the per mi a- j lie uce of W lug counsels which hit election will secure, to shield us from the further rtl'.-cts of Democratic elf rts to extend the ' area of freedom." This is my position. lours truly, J Mi. M SIlAr'Ttlll. Burlington, Aug W, nh Mr. Polk's tariff is making sad work among the Pennsylvania imn interests. A letter lu Hie Pin la-delpbot News, from Danville, sais: " The Rolling Mill and all the furnaces in DanvilhA. Prim , are closed, and at less! ttiM workmen thrown out of employment Si sly four of Ihe company's Houses are empty, and linlt the remaining loU w ill be so in a few days." Ilerrwo Fun Among the sltractions to tins grea cattle show, the Ilulfilo Conner notices ten stud fnr sea of a peculiar breed from Canada. Tlie Republic, the Bariiburiiing piper also gives no lice Hut Mr. Van Bur. n and Ins son John wdl lie there, Stalls having been taken al the Mansmn. ( tereUnd lit raid Ciiopriin nrr llnio- IV .Vr York Courier and Fnqnirer has been inlormed that H ii F. Ilntler t.sq , tinted Silica Attorney I'T thai District, Ins tins connection But on llns question, as it now arises, there is a dilXcieiice, and a wide difference between the conduct and nib gniy nf Maitui Van Buren, aud the acts and motives o Wings. All men concede lint the present agitation of llns topic hts its foundation m (he annexation of Texas in its incident, ihe Mexican war fruits. The whole subject was before Mntiii Van Uuren in ample time for hnn to have resisted tlie evil when resist nice would lave Iieen patriotism. Hut lei il be noted, lhat in 111, when Henry City stood on the cb vsted platform ) his Rihigh letter, and when the wh.de energ f Ihe lug pirty ol tlie nation Were aroused and put forth to resist thai destructive S oniiern acquisition, Mnrlui Van Buren, formally, puldicly, threw Ihe Weight of Ina inlloeiiee into the scale o war, conquest snd slave extension ! Aud now, when Hie frightful evil whe-h he aud Ins allies ill New York might have prevented, by mi opposition to J lines K P.dk, is on us m all itr force, In- a chief culprit he, denetvmg as he does, in cnniiomi Willi all oile r Co workers in iniquity, (lie he.nty con. deniiiatiou of every patriotic hesil, iiist. ad ol it dmg Ins face in shame, pii-sumcs to make a virtue o Ina past prostitution u mllueiiee, and a.-ks the I'n solciiey, at Wing hands, aa a n-wsid lor Ins penitence, sup pose for the very evils whx-tt he his anted lo bung upon Ins country ! Martin an Buren appears before he's with nrcoolfiils anil Mi sla ili.l. it I'r.xn llu. been removed, and John McKvun, F.sq , appmiiU d in j bps ol our lenders, winch so vainly weie urged against his place. htmsi-ll and associates, in resistance In Ihu calamities which he and they have brought upon the nation .. t with n coolness winch Satan himself miyhienvv ask. J J Jn regard h.m a. an angel of ,glt !tts BOfi T Z ;LJ'?'i"ljr' wham H"."1 resurreclion ha. b n vou , . fed as a prov.dent.al boon to rescue Ihe conn-l y I . .. peril ! Wo, AIr Van ji.iren- no! Tl,i.efll t try-7,: ::;;Tctbm h -nd ::m3atT thai disappointed an5 Z" he. u& not a si tore i.i.i m.,,i . oui mere uirKs Permitted a u.un cl..r...i.uJ . ' ." UK'" Jour . vU...u,uni a, to your UJ0. l?.!i"I..'"d,,"""el""! M.r Vw '""i """t lie Ihe relrosnrri. i .i.uu m...: ir i. .ill. H,l,er prin.ifc."rtrvS: br..k tl,,, .' 1 ," r .. ' ,""V"r " ",e " limii,. Zi', . ! I'!""?'"1 "r ..in ...... . - ' "'""'W, ai.a iu nnlird .villi .Vim di-clarnll I .r l II. '. ..V' V" in.,r,,tn.,v,.i,,,,, oi im, ., f,,u,ld," ,;; Willis, tri.ru our rrtrih. i "" J 'T 'IT ? r i"d"c'' "f "' '" d" '"" , r ."i, w.r. ui.i,ii,nir,t.d and , ' " "- me iinuiminei and snot. ' A ""."V. "I',' ""l'"rl1"1 '"' ' rv of Wl. . . I . '"' "..IM... I.rtw,.,.,, i. ,;. ryol Wliij, ,dtlal rmr,i vn Uu.n .,, TT? ""!' b"'"'1'1 111 ""c,.. I.,, , ...HIIH.J. winch ,ch ,,, tilMI,t. .;,, ul Tl,,. Vn llnr , - : V nn oririir.iml n ivliicli , - , " M "ie election o f,,,,.,, herH In I lire- w ., u.,ii ,.; i... u .. . ,. . " 1 7 unniMi states Senate. .,lly.lrl,..lll.l,j,.ct, ,, iv,,i -,v, T. p.., w a .iiiiiU, ,)ri:,i,z,tin , C.,K., ,i ,vl, vllluH Wll ,. , p,,,.,,, f ll,'liri..,.i iiLiv... -l ' .. . ' 1 ii a.. ,i,r B rre.uU'nitui rlv - r ..7 coiiirarv, ask lor t be har- T"r "f " 1 , it,,. eur;.., ,.,.;;;. " y in' r-it-ricd In i i ,i r.i., ne e mir. !.,. I... . . rrn.,,,1. I re,u,d, nnll,,,,,, ,e but hi. S- ,r. KlUNKr.niT, Kv , Seat 1, rile rrn-.t nw an I h-,... ' . n.ilinnlKiti itnip.....iu tl k,i.i a..: i . .-.....,,. ' " 1' 'I1"'1 r. uuniu d,-,,.,.n,.,, a,,j .""ir v.ir.,.na C.-l.-if rn(,ti.. p.pli, ill .,1,1,1,,,,, , ,e ,. c-....,la T,.,.r, ''""' '.'"1. w-re ll w,,,k , ,.,,! ',,y .Mr. Ilarilea mi.. ,.r tl . .. ' . .... ,,, ,,. mVn . . . I Mill.. ...... telegraph, who reiim-ated i'mf.-aur M..f. i.. Biiv errors, if errors it. r ,..n.i ... .t. . . . , . , ' - io no-ex H:inaiioiii, olid a siiuilrr r,nii.ui i . i... . .. ' 1 rolessor Morse n n li..H tl. .1 1 ..... .. ... .. 1 - " r uiu iiui kiiow liiai lie had any llmig 1.) tnv. Morse 0d Kendall persist in claiming a monopoly of Wtr...lagilel.sin...rTeleirra,.h.cpurpos.... ' Kiel y . counsel re.,.1 Ihe claim of ,.,..1.,,y ,.. vers grounds ; nH,- il. want of or.g'uah.y, snd rands connected with the pa.r,, while also sin w , " " ' usee on uie U llielly f,iue he. twee,, L..ois.e and N,-w Orleans, u .,,.1 a., improve - ' -o u uy rr saor or-e. The same counsel a U.. B...ri 11. . .1 , . l nioiMipoiy 01 a gene ;:in.,:::,c,i,:';," tb '- I he (fenoslf ion an. I i . ... .viiim-iiif aireauy sutiimlteU would form a large volume Tlie whole I1..M .. ..1..-. 1 . . . 1 1 l uiscoverv is brought in on Hi I ',,",'!,lil.,w ar,1 P"-iil case, are atudn d The oucglion nl i.... , .. .1.. . ....... ,,u.-r un. case one ol tlie ,.i.t..i.p..rl.,tev,T tried in America. Power ol InMlnct. c . , , Cii,K,ii.T.,, O., April SI. On Paturtliv ln.l ' . ' . Inking l,.,lay ,, i,cl i Hl, A "T ""11,,,"',d 'U'Mnl to III,. V1aie, wc c,i, f,,ttu. it ti,.d , r,.w ,.,; bl wl,, , .tie,,,,,! ,,!,. , Ui Wllh u ,1uii Miiii( ,"" "y wli.rn 11 oae nded t Ilia l..p with q,l li,..., ,d H off l the l,k of oilier, winch ,t ,. .,,,,d t i,.i,,,,,d ,!. , , anollip. It ... .... . ... " " " toroen wiui Boldness, and win e the lo. was bi'iiitr p.ii ..tr ...i .1.. . . . 1 . .. e 1 ' " on ope,,, II lot ereU absuit the feet of ih,,.,. .-.., ... ....,.... Willi an iirmmiinitl n.i.., ... V. , ., . . 1 i"" "", inwn jrfirning llie 1I.111-iferof the fa niir.iiH. .......... .. .. ... , ., , " ""-o ii ireu ieiuiy nisseu ...10 the lt. IH,.. ,l,e lg ltrJ .! ,. ,1. M and tw.m,,, llr M wrn !,(.,, , w,lh c.re, nd h,d d .wn lo her, .he Bi.,rd one up w.ll, her piw. ,, , ,d,., bulk, ;.d , K,,.r. ed pin. w,th her ,,ill,, r,., d the ..,e tree .l,e Inrl pre,m.ly tni. ,,,,, f h, i(Jm n tl to another, .i,.l . ,,, ij1(. ,dlhe younir " ' , , """ ai.e ...on renin.,, I, ..III III like manner l,H,lt BUI.H . . .. same place She seemed to lack however in n.l,,.N. Imn, and returned again, eiamined the place minute. v : but hiiilin.r , r 1 - . . -r progeny, sue went tlie same directum, and relumed no nn.re fteajfuue. Pnsanitea In Ihe VirKinln Legislnlure. A Mr. Lee. niKmh-r ..r .1.- u . "": ""B" 01 .-g,ues, wore a wig, with a long queue, m Ihe old fas 11 A waggish brother member, (lloberls, of Cul eper.) dty aiw Lee wriggling 111 Ins seat aud truig lo cut. h Ihe Speakers eye, that lie mihl riss and make H SIH'eCll. It dell.Ti.nlv i..A ..... t 1. e .1. . 1 ,r iruv in in.' 111 111 hack o the bench nn which L sal, and su h tin nil uiat nousesuon, tut wilhin the last ten or twelv, Vrars 'I ho iu.tI m, ... . . and Mr Lee rose, eagerly eielmiiiitnr : Mr Sneaker!" hoi 1. tr . ... 1 '"ifto lloberls, he in the same breath cried oui, "y.m r I'he House roared, of course, Mr l,..,Ur..i ... " ., . . " "'- ne 1 niir; ami, there os-mg no biismess jroing nn, pull, d' out some bum notes, and bet'n lo count ilixm C........1 ih....l. . rose and snid ; .Mr. Sneaker. I nmn ilni tl..... n.jf. l 1 1 , , . - ..... .ii,, ate Ullll IMJ 1,-llQ t I),))) Ihe Inble. 1 ll...1.1ri.l.. I....11.. I... I It 1 . ... ttjr iiuooien ,ns lines into Ins pocket. anl said," I he gentleman from Uath is out of order !' A bishful metnlier rfrmn Amrusta. I iho.k , i make Ins maiden speech, on some local quea ntcr- n " ioustiiueiiis, anu tiegnn : "Mr. S.teiiker! what shall I mv in ents 1" and then, unable lo utter anolliHr syl,,bb-, stood. ... )- n(i..n, ue suipetactioii ol terror. "im n.oini, leaning lorwartl in h al, said, in vIiisjmt audible all over Ihe use, 'Ul , 'led to make a speech I" The ooor vieim. t t.Lh. fulness sunk down upm the bench, and never at-tempted lu speak altertvardi. When Ihe lali fl..,n... . " ""oor wss apeiiKer, a member from .. So,,th-,de c tv (whom I shall ell Mr Kyle) rose to speak, un m cusloii.ed, permtps it .is his ma, den speeeh e whs Very much in ..ve Willi ItlH he VI... ! .... .. " oiir;iV, iiilOifllter Ol r. tournv, w no was also a m-mtn-r Mr. K b. g ui ; 'Mr Speaker! I rise frcighled With op.mous loo lug lor Utterance, yet I 11 tons and t nulid- he Sin. ores. e, t " fll.h, 11 !.'.,. . . lull 1 'lim yonder c s lr F.iUrtv ! ' and down .ir sit, wnh-int fmiher power of utterauee The Sll.-lk.-r Ur.lh.a.r l.t rl,..U.. I. I : 1 ' vioimrr.isoi''iii, and, r.tllv Ins tsintiiig spirit, railed out, "Mr R le lias tin-11 i..r , Mr K- herenp in rose again, and o.tl Mr Speaker! The grandest thoughls were in my MINI, I ih.H ll !.. ,.!..,. .1 , . J omi nif soul 10 conceive i t"lt' ,,r- 1 ' "W un. f, in.l I., the great loss of mnii- konl. they were entirely dissipated by the euliaoee of Mr tuuray ! lie sal down, and SUoke nn umr ll.ai session. 1 ne na.iiia sm ru.......i n.:. 1 . .. . . - u " -fco.-u u tins aoccuoir, outttntrn Literary Muttngrr. ......ir,, Hm iitiKKR 11 is aiatea tliat the wile ami danghvr of Lititte, ihe French It inker, m ho J j in nit" tiirone 01 r r.lllCe, Mil.- ved at New York steerage pusseng. rs It w il 1 . c since. Thev arc said lo hove brouk.,i .,. vakil'.!-pioperly with them, and pr- bibty iMine 111 the steer lge for Ihe purpose uf cmictvlmeiit. A very largeVig nrgaiimlion meeting was heblh iu II it 'ii 011 ruesilay, ami was addn-ssi d 111 an side, manly and m"l are, piable manner by the llu ,h...it Lawrence, lichgates io the Woreesi.-r tVuventn n w,'r' "I'l tted, tho lion It .b.-rl C. Wiiithropli. ad nig the list. m a ititir.n. At London. Ohio, t.n iim ,tnii ultimo, hv the Rv. Mr, rq,.rtHig Mr. Join StoCKTO?! 10 .MlU Mlhlllt J sl-r MiJirn. hotli of this city. On this iiiornuw tbeotb iot , bv tlie Hrv tieo, (' I'u . Mr 1 ham 11 U a K it 1 s tu Mis AUiauAHkr Suihii.tui . this city.

WEf j 1 0 0 am 0 kNAL VOLUME XXXIX. VuuLISIIi:DEVKHFwtJ)NK.rtl)AY7r0UNINli UY Till! U.I, & RKKD. JIIic.B tho Journal Riiililini, iouIIi et cornet of High trust Mill Sugar nlley. VM, B. TIIIUTX AINU IIKM1Y IlKED, Editor!. T KR M : Tunr.K Dni.i.tns ?vn a mum, which mtjr b iltujw" by the payment of Two lloi.i.tx in lulvanca, nd froo ol poMauft, or ol" pnr cntiiKO to Airtinl" or Collector.. Tint Jnurunl ! " puuli.hed Daily and In-Weekly du rin the you; D.ily,poriiin,g7i Tri-Woukly,Jj. COLUMBUS, WEDNESDAY, SEP TEMBEK 13, 1848. NUMBER 2. MONDAY EVENING, BEP'I EHBER 4, 1H4H. Norwalk nnd Sandusky Hnnks. The Sandusky Clarion of September 1, aaya the reports of tho failure of the Norwalk and Sandusky Banks are incorrect; that tho notes of both Banks have, io fir as wo have heard, been promptly redeemed in specie, win-never presented " and odds thai the recent report ot the failure nf these Banks probably originated with dishonest brokers." Martin Van liuren. The fact that this gentleman ia now in tho field aia oandidatn for President of the United Sialea and that there are those who raft themselves Whig, and who, wi are bound in charity to suppose really think themselves Whigs, enlisted in hia aupport, are event well calculated in excite aurpriae. And the further (net lint hia claim ahould be urged upon tho American people aa the peculiar advocate of " free aoil " and the restriction of slavery, ia another peculiarity in Hit' affair which challenges admiration. Let u retrospect : In IH.12, Mr. Van Huron waa placed upon the tick el with lien Jackson, aa the candidate of that diatin-guiilicd champion of " free aoil" for Ihe Vice Presi (lency to which office he waa elected aaa reward fur liia aervility to Ihe " alnve power " nlid lo compeiiiale fur hia liavieg been recalled by the American Senate from liia mission to England, for having, while Secretary of Slate, given matructiona to the American Minister (here, derogatory to the character of nn A me rican eiliten. lie remained four lull yeara iii the of ficp of Vice President, during which time he gave hia casting title fir Ihe puisne of a law to authorizo every petty poil master wlioae overweening curioaily or villainoiia propenaity might prompt him to audi a count', to peer into the content of the mail, and ah-alract therefrom any newspapers, pamphleta ormaga-tinea which lie might suspect of being in favor of " free soil," and to limit audi mail matt r ! Tim ia one specimen of hia devotion to " free aotl, free speech, free press and free labor." luringall the lime he waa in Ihe Senate of the U Sialea while Gen Jackson's Secretary of State Minister to England and Vice President, hia views Up'n all topics at all connected with the subject of slavery, were an consonant with those of Gen. Jackson, aa never lo have awakened the least suspicion of hia fidelity to the South, in the mind of the meat wily and vigilant defender of the Southern "peculiar institution." Jn fact be supplanted even John C. C;ilhoun himself, in the confidence of Southern puliticiatia. And when transferred from a subordinate pott to that of President of the I'm led Statea, lie availed himself of the occasion of Ina inauguration, Ui advertise Congress that He Forbid the passage of any law touching slavery in the District of Columbia for lie would guard the " institution " there, like the apple of Ins eye ! In KWi, Martin Van Uuren waa elected President of Ihe United Statea ; and in I H (J he waa a candidate for re-election; and auch waa then liia devotion to the cause of "free toil" that Nkw IlArrsinnr. an It.. LIKOII WERE TUB ONLV HoK-fl.AVKIIo.HNO STATES ik tub Union Til T VoTKIl foK HIM ! While at the a m ue time, Virginia, South Carolina, Alabama, Missouri, and Arkanaaa found no acruplea al all in giving liim their support. The whole number of electoral votes cast at that election waa of winch Martin Van Uuren received precisely 6) and of these (j), twelve were from the free Statea and the remaining forty-eight from slave Statea. lie waa then backed by all Ihe forcu of a regular" nomination, and by the vast influence of the federal patronage. He now appears upun the lurf stripped of bolh these advantages.from this allowing tho honest enquirer may infer with a tolerable approximation to accuracy, what are tlie present prospects of a restoration of the Van Uuren dynasty ; and also the amount of advantages likely to inure to the cause of free soil " from such restoration, aupposing that were among the list of probabilities.The simple truth if, Mr. Van Buren is fallen man; and the etF .rl at present being made to raise him from hia low estate, is lo be regarded seriously only so far aa thai i-tf rl may contribute indirtrlly to the success of Gen. Cass, where a direct effort to that end would prove unavailing. Nothing that ia pros pec live and undetermined, we regard aa tnoro certain limn that either Zichary Taylor or Lewis Cass will, if they live until nell March, be the neit Preside nlnf the United Statea; and people are free to vote fir either nf these as ibeir judgments may dictate throw away their votes or uot vote at all- The alternatives are before them for their ehoice ; and while they are freo to make their seleo'ion, it were mere madness lor the in to endeavor to clunge the predicate. Van liuren aud liia Stuff. Among Ihe curious little circumstances attending the euifi change in Mr. Van Buri n's sentiments, and winch illicit be used in evidence, in case the sincerity of that ch inge is railed in question, is the fact, lint he has not co me to the tree Sil ranks alne. In Ihe days of Ins rampant Lsofocoisin when lord of the ascendant, lie gloried in that corruption by which and from which lie arose, he had a staff of LiithtuI tunueht, who breathed but in Ihe wind of his nostrils, and who wore by no other name thin hia it was Ina voice thai spoke in the House nf Uepresentativcs, in Ihe nceches of Churchill C. Cambreleng; and it was his doctrines that were promulgated in the resolutions of conventions reported by Benjamin K. Butler. I Mr. Van Buren h ia gone over to those against whom I liis bitterest wit fire waa ever directed; and he has not gone over alone. His favorite stuff, the promulgator of Ina written, and the declarer of his oral decrees are still by Ins sole. Still Ihe wordy oracles are pronounced by Ins Camhreli'iig, and the written pro-nanciamrntot are fabricated by hi Outlet, and these suspicious I'aekat of hit pro si. i very wars are now the chosen champions of that party which glories mosl in all that pertains to the racnhulury of fried m. Look nt the Other Side. If il was wrong in Gen. Taylor lo accept the nomination of tho meeting at Charleston, S C, what ahould lie have done t He fuse il lleject the nomination and refuse tho South Carolinians the privilege of voting for hull f Gen. Taylor waa already a candidate before the people the trkolt people uf the United Stiles ; and ho was so by his own consent. The nomination had been made by a Whig Convention and accepted, and the principles upon which his administration is lo be conducted, if he is elected, had been repeatedly declared Shall Ihen, Gen. Taylor refuse the soil rages of a part of that people be In re the For tag o County Whin." This is the name of a new paper, the first number of which waa issued at Kavenna, on Wednesday last, by J. S. Herrick, Esq. A paper which should make known truly Ihe position of tfie Whig party, ita ends and aim, was much needed in Portage county. The "Star" which has in years past illumed the path of W higgery, and battled atrungly against the abuses and corruptions of Van Bureniam and all other kinds of Locofokery, has dimmed its light in tho resplendent effulgence of the ButTato nomination ; and not only censed to be a faithful exponent of Whig ineaaurea, but lent itaelf to the task of decrying Whig men. Under Iheae circumstances, we greet with great satisfaction, the Portagt County Whig which promises to do good service in advancing the good cause in that portion of Ohio. Success to tho Whig and lo all true Whigs, in their laudable and patriotic efforts. " Liberty Equnlity Fruternity.' Weller sails the " free soil" folks "scurvy sheep" and Judge Tappan (says the Steubenville Herald) offsets this compliment by denominating the Weller party ' Whiskey Democrats." Correspondence of the Ohio Sin to Journal. Toi-Etio, Aug. an, leflS. Last night I attended a Free Soil, Barnburner Van Buren meeting, vol up for Ihe purpose of giving Charles It. Miller, President of the Toledo bank, an opportunity to flesh his maiden-sword in politics This young gentleman, who is a very clever man, gave his first vote in 1H-10 for Van Uuren, and changed from Locoloco to Wlnir in 1844, and is now airniu in favor ol electing Van Uuren m 14H. Su (hat he has ad justed Ins polilicnl cycle lo a period of four years. 3lr. Miller read to Ins suiheucc a labored speech, in which he showed Dial he had profited Home hy Ins four years sojourn among the Wings, and that lie had recently been also faiiiiliarizmir himself lo the dogmas of the Liberty party liul Hit) ease with which he mouthed the term 11 Democracy, showed too plainly the source of his first impresmotis The speech was an exceedingly long one, and was delivered in so unpleasant a lone (riot much unlike that of the Hell-man in I lie streets uf Columbun) that it would be difficult for a man of my nervous temperament to feel suili- ciently at eaae under such an infliction, to do justice itlier lo inn man or Ina production. 1 wilt tuereioro dismiss both with the single remark, that there was nothing new in the speech, nor any old ideas winch have not been presented in much more fiscilialing and striking colors. If Mr. Miller preserves this speech and Hhnll read it when he is some twenty years older, be will then regret that he was ever guilty of so much lolly and weakness, anil yet it is very etideiil mat he now regards il as an exceedingly able production, and will no doubt leel greatly disappointed il the great central managers of his new party associates do not print and circulate a lart'e edition ot it. What is to be the effect of I h is new parly ortfnnita-ti'n upon the Whig and Locofncn parties proper? Tins is a question which I do not intend an attempt lo aiiHiver; lor beating upon the outskirts of political in- tell'irence I can oulv g.itber items for use at Ihe great centre, where, by a concentration of fuels, something like correct conclusions can bo formed in regard lo tho probable grind resull. In this place the uarnhurners, nr 41 r ree Huil men as they call themselves, number about forty ; of that number seven have heretofore voted with the Wings, two of whmn may indeed yet vote with them. How many nf the original Loeol'ocoa may yet he induced to return to their old party, if any, cannot Ih known until the election is over. Tins much, however, ia, I think, pretty clearly established slready, that some of Ihe leading Burn burners are out and out hicufocut in itisgaite, secretly encouraging Ihe movement hr Ihe side purpose of inducing Iht dissalmfied Wfiigs'.o join their ranks, and when once thev shall have them fairly committed to the support of Van liuren. Will, With such ot their l.ocof.ico followers as they can control, willttlrate and chuckle over the success of their trick- Vo-morrow Ihe " Free Soil " party of (his Congress ional diklncl meet in Convention at Defiance, tor the purpose of nominating a candidate for Congress. It is said that John Fitch, su., will be their man. Yours, &c. Denth to the Democrutic Iurly -Gcn. Cnas. The following characteristic letter has lxen pub- halted in the A it ri Arbor True Democrat, a Barnburn er paiter. 1 he Detroit Advertiser says, "community was shocked tiy its publication and perusal. 11 II bus already been perused by most of our citizens with horror, but we give il a place in the Advertiser this morning, that the whole country may see what s dishonest, iuimoral aid rogut of a demagogue Lewis Cass is," Hero is me letter ; Washinoto!!, Feb. 1!, rM7. Mil Dear Sir Your friend Dovle will be selected as a Lieutenant, and I am glad we can give you tins proot ol a desire to piy respect to your recommenda tion. 1 am pressed to death by business, or 1 would write you a longer letter, however, Hie newspapers give you a full account of our strange proceeding. We have not done much good ; mil they say it is the darkest hour just before da) light, aud 1 am inclined to think that our darkest hour has past. It seems lo me that gooil is coining out of uiiKchief. There is a more de. leroiiued spirit to support the administration than I have seen heretofore. It ia now dmlniclly understood, anil it will be the true Democratic sentiment through the country, that everything must give way to a vigorous prosecution of the war, and thai no measures must be proposed (hat-will i-mhanafs the administration.The Wiliuot Proviso will not pass the Senate. It will be death to the war death to all hopes n gelling an acre of territory death to the administration, and death lo the Democratic party. Il waa not so intended Il no doubt originated with prop r fn-lings but things hive now come to such a pass, that its adoption will produce these effects. It is dilinclly avowed by the S ulhern members of Cong reus that they would not vote for any measures for Ihe prosecution of the war, nor would they ratify any treaty il tins pro. visem becomes a lit w. It will probably go bark Iroin Ihe Senate lo the Uuse, where 1 hope the appropriation will pass without any proviso. I am, with great respect, truly yours, II. S. Wiison, K-q. LKW. CASS. Was ever Ihe evidence of so much corruption of heart, and recklesouess of purpose, comprised in so few lines before? The morality of Santa Anna is "pure and undeliled religion " when compared With that which is evidenced in this letter of Lewis Cass. Only liMik al the reasons which he gives in the concluding paragraph for opposing ihe Wiluiot Proviso the rea sons why the Hiltnot Proviso will not pass the Senate, ojt would he death to the war death to all the Iiojk's of gelling an acre of territory death lo the administration, and death to the Democaralic par- There we find a man, occupying the position of an American statesman, deliberately avowing himself willing lo crush the fundamental principle of freedom itself for party purposes. Such is the plain implication ol the letter u II would be death to the Democratic party." But this is not all. " It would be death lo the war." Our eiluena must full by ihe thousand, eot otriiy Ihe Mexican's lance, or by Ihe more deadly Mexican chmaie, wives must be made widows, and children mul be made orphans all tins, according to Ihe morality uf General Cass, was belter than In adopt a measure which would be death lo the Democratic parly." And llns unprincipled old gentle man now asks the American pie to insult the memory of Gcnrgo Washington, hy placing linn in I ho chair once occupied hy the father of hia country. The utile nl government organ al Washington is becoming fierce in its attacks upon Martin Van liuren. Its leading editorial of Thursday, bearing Ihe caption of The Apostate," handles without gloves the former embodiment of Democratic perfection. The opening paragraph, which we subjoin, will serve as a sample of the spirit nf Ihe whole article : 11 We intend in sinp off completely the mask from the face of Mr. Van Buren and bis Barnuuruing chain- inons. I he duty is lorceu upon us tiy the crisis it TUESDAY EVENING, HEPrKMUEIl 3, 18-18. W The Ohio Statesman is informed that the Journal does not " bark out" from its statements in relation to Judge Dalzell, as is falsely alleged in that paper of yesterday. If the Statesman wishes to join issue with us upon the truth nf our statements, aud lo go to trial before Ihe public upon the testimony, we are ready. Nay, we will take the allirmaiive of the case, if the Statesman even will iutiuialo a doubt of its accurate and exact truth and fairness, Does the Statesman de sire lo be proven to be what every one already knows that it i f whole ol whom he stands acandid ite, and who ask ol i( , tlfl tTt) nl)ce mo'e nominated lo the high linn nothing but the privilege of voting fur him f No I est nltice in the world. His miserable ambition, and pledges are required, and the ftrat intimation he I its t'H more. Ins vindictive pamns, are despicable 1 , , . , i . . , -r, enough ; but il is the means which he employs which upon ihe subject is Ins unconditional nomination. I Ins i ' '. - I"1"""" ruic v.... .r. every honest mind. Il ia hia attempting lu gratify Ilia passuma at the expense nf his country ; and st the risk of disturbing the peace and even the union of Ihe Confederacy, he is attempting to build up a nor-Ikern nnrfi, mi sectional feelings and geographical ines. II is, then, time to expose nun in an me wiles On the Stump The old, tried and true Whig lead ors of tne Slate men, up to whom in limes of dark ness and peril the countenances of the Whigs of Ohio have ever been turned for counsel and for deliverance men, who have never faltered and who have never been suspected, whose history is not the history of a day, aud whose faith is no new chapter in a recent rev elation, are now before Ihe people doing strong ami ef. fective duty in support of Whig measures and Whig men. The people of Ihe State uf Ohio have heard ot Kwing, Corwiu, Vinton, Delano, Anthony, Hunter, Green, Mason, Collier, Goddard, Slanlon their voi ces will inspire courage, their words give confidence, and their reasons carry 'conviction. Krrnr is already falling before Ihem, and that truth which, although crushed never expires, is rising, healed of its wounds mid preparing for its day of glorious triumph. pKfiNsvi.vAfiiA Nominations. The Whigs of Erie Congressional District have nominated James Camp bell, Esq , of Clarion, ihe candidate for Congress Judge Thompson, of Erie, is the Locoloco candidate. The Erie Gazelle says Mr. Campbell is a popular nnd stun able gentleman, well known and much beloved at home, nnd will, we nro informed, command nn unusually strong vole there. He was supported for Ine o lice two years ago, under circumstances not calcula ted to inspire hopes of success, nnd it seems but just that now, when the prospect is more encouraging, he should receive the cordinl and active support uf the Whigs of the District. The Whigs of Beaver county have nominated Hon. John Dickey, Ihe present nble member from the XXih Congressional District, ft re-election. The District j is composed uf Beaver and Washington counties. Gubkiin ATottm, Nominations in Pknihyi.vasu. The Wing Stale Convention which met at Harrisburg, on the lllst ult., nominated without ballot, and by ac clamation, Wu F. Joiinton, of Armstrong county, us the candidate of the Whigs tor the office of Gov- rnor of Pennsylvania. The nomination was unani mous, aud has given great satisfaction to Ihe Whigs throughout the Slate. The Locofoco Convention which met on the 30th, alio, at Harrisburg, did not succeed on the first day in making a nomination On the second, after many bal- lottiiigN, Moulds Lonoatiiktii was selected as the can. didale by a small mnj trily. The correspondent of Ihe Philadelphia News, says " There is much dusntufac- lion expressed out of doors with the nomination of Mr. Longslreth, and he will, by no means, receive the united vole of his party." Miiuufuctured lor the Occasion Many tun s, w hen m emergency some article is re. quired to sub jrve a special purpose, it becuuiea a theme of recommendation to it, in ihe eye of both vender and purchaser, that it was " manufactured for the occasion." If it has been made with reference to the event which demands its use, it must, of course, be-peculiarly fit lo supply thai want in all ita features and aspects, The people of the Northern portion of the United State have, ol late, been supplied with an apt illustration of the above remark, in the person of one of the candidates for Ihe Presidency. The principles of candidate Van Uuren bear every evidence of having been miitmj'iicturrtl far the oecanion. The gloss of newness which rests upon the article, attests the recency of its manufacture ; ami Ihe completeness and promptness with which it comes Umn the market to supply an ex , isling demand, is conclusive evidence thai Ihe ingo- j nious inventor had the prescience lo foresee that de-1 mind, and th enterprise to provide that his comiuodi- j ty ahould be a complete answer to it. And the hawkers of the Free Democracy, whenever they recommend their candidate to the support of whomsoever it may concern, do not fail to expatiate upon the novelty of Ihe invention an ) the value of the patent; aud ttiis new element in the qual lies of an aspirant to office, is expected to be as effective in procuring his acceptance by the people, as il is in the case of the last patent beehive, chum, washing machine, or straw-cutter, or anything else thai is got up to save labor, make tho fortune of the inventor, or gull the poor unfortunate that invests his capital m its purchase. $11,1100 We have not been as yet able to learn, that Col. John It. Weller, late a brave volunteer in Mexico, and now Elocutory candidate for the office of Governor of Ohio, regul irly nominated by the Loco-Democratic patty, ha made any provision for the payment of Ihe small balance due from him to the in a aury of Duller county. If he ahould do an, we ahsll take great pleasure in announcing il immediately. IP The thing is being done in Ihe Slate of Ohio. We shall shortly have iioihiu more to complain of in regard lo the ap tlby of the Wtt,'s. They are coming up to the work and lending their energies to secure a thorough organization We are neither to be delivered bound into Ihe hands of a revoiiioiiary commillee. nor consigned lo the disgraceful limbo of subserviency to the fortunes of Gen Cass. The exertion of such men as Ewing aud Corwiu, and Delano, and Walker, and Green, and Cary, are wakng men up to a sense of their danger and their duty, and like the sounding of I r ntnpets in preparation nf battle are railing Ihem hack to their ranks nerved for the combat and with the assurance of victory. DltAINAttB of Tim Citv Its NlCFSSITV We call the notice nf Ihe readers of the Journal today, to the coniinunioittion of an able nnd learned correspondent, upon the aubjt-cl ol a seasonable provision against the ravages of Ciioi.nu, by a suitable attention to pub ic cleanliness. Tin Onto Mkimcai. ash Si hoicai. Joi iihai., f.', itrd bij John Bcttkhfiku, M. D. Calumbtu,J. tl. II tit if a Co., September 1. We have had placed in our hands by the publisher!, the first number of a bi-mint hi if periodical hearing the above title, edited hy Professor Butterheld, of the Starling Medical College ol tins city. The outward appearance of ihe Journal ami ita general execution are exceedingly good, and ao far as we are aide lo judge, itsootiteiils are lo an equal degree interesting and valuable.The first thirty nine pages of the work are devoted to original articles from the pens of Drs. Howard and Marney of Columbus, Professors Gihbs of Willuiighby, and Jinlkins of Cincinnati, and Dr. Cately uf Delaware, aud Ihe remainder is filled with valuable articles selected from the wide field of medical literature. Having read a portion of (he artiales, we beg leave to say here, thai while we cannot doubt but the Journal will he looked upon by the profession as a valuable addition toils literature, we see no reason why it should Kohhkrv. Charles T. Artlnir,acoltle drover from Madison county, Ohio, was robbed by two ruffians near Newport, in Shelby county, Ohio, on the llth of August last, in the evening. He received a shot through his vest and shirt, also stab from a dirk, the dirk only inflicting a slight wound. The rntliaus having cut the reins of his bridle, his horse sprang from under him ; they then gave him a heavy blow on Ihe head, which rendered him senseless, and robbed him of his money, $l,G.'!j Two men have been arrested on auapicion, bul discharged fur want uf evidence. Mr. Arthur ia an elderly man, was unwell at the time, and on his way home. He has been confined to his bed with a fever up to this time. Comm. Railroad from Dayton Wkbt. The Cincinnati Gazelle says ; Our friends at Dayton have a greatgo-a-headitivcneis. They have organized a Railway Company to bring into that city the Indiana trade and travel, and directed a survey to be made. Their efforts are very commendable, and ahould admonish the good people of Cincinnati to see to the completion of the Hamilton road, and lo have it pushed on to Indiana. Qj Sitmuet Medary's manikin who writes editorials in the Statesman, is of the opinion that Gen. Taylor doea not much resemble Gen. Washington; and an haa ho recorded it in half a column of balderdash in that paper of yesterday. The histories of those two great men are very similar in one respect : They have been abused by a great variety of mean fellows, who in so doing, have exhibited nothing ao plainly as their own hnpoiency am) vilenss. Tiik Union Givks it Up. The Washington Un-ion makes an ettimate of Ihe States Cass will get, and mi I a down Ohio and South Carolina, which make up the sum of l'i,i, seven more than a majority. The calculation of the Union is a virtual acknowledgment that ('ass has no chance, The hero of Hull's surrender lias no more prospect of carrying Ohio than he bus of receiving the electoral vole of Kentucky. C'oNHFquKNcr-a of V orif.a Fhkk Soil. Since the lectmu of IfUl, when Abolitionism annexed Texas, made us guilty uf the crime of war, entailed upon as a national debt, and sowed the seeds of disorder and disunion, there has been no more strikitigexeinplHication of the evils remitting from the Free Soil organization than appears in the late election in Iowa. The Free Soilers in Des Moines county, at the sug gestion of some shrewd Cass men, ran an independent ticket for the Legislature. 1 his ticket received about 101) votes, and thus threw th" choice of a Senator and four Itepr-'sentalives into the h tml of tin Lcofocos, as intisl have been foreseen Tint Springfield Republican snys ; " The votes of these ue'll will probably secure the election of two Cass Locofocos to the U. S. Senate." The Free Soilers doubtless glory in the deed ; the country Ihe ' oppressed and down trodden," suffer the consequences. The Marine Srhvicf.. A board ia now in session in Washington, il is said, for Ihe discharge of 4 captains and -I first and -I second lieutenant from the ma-rine force -the whole number of men being now reduced lo'j.:i:i:t, what it wsn the !iud of March, r47. The duty of the board is to examine the claims and services of each oHiccr, and lo ascertain who are Ihe least meritorious. Honors to Gr.s. Wool,. An immense gathering of the citizens ofl'roy,New York, aud of that portion nf the State, took place in th it city on the UilU ult , to do honor to General Wool on his return from Mcx- Addresses, processions, military reviews, and the presentation of a sword, were among Ihe ceremonies ol the occasion, the Troy papers speak of the proceedings as exceedingly brilliant. Jj' Messrs. Chase, Vaoghan, and Briggs, having "stumped the Reserve," have g me gone over into " Macedonia," to help ihe people of the Peninsular Stnte. They were advertised at Detroit on the 1stinstant. Whether their exertions in that Stale will have a tendency to secure its vote to General Cass, wo have no means of knowing, hut probably nut. That (heir labors in Ohio have a ded Ihe pretensions uf that gentleman, we have no doubt. (U A ainall boy in this cily was yesterday snapped at and bitten hy a dog, under circumstances calculated lo induce the belief that if not decidedly mad, he must have been very much mil of patience. Tho child is al large, and so is the d'-g. Art. Riiiiit. Divid Fndieraud J M Williams, the unsuccessful candidates for nomination to Congress in the second District, are exerting themselves in support of the Wing ticket, Taylor and Filhuor?, Ford and Campbell, Aa. LT There are rumors ot an extensive fire at Bury-rns on Friday last, winch is said to have destroyed several stores and a large amount of property in the business pari uf the town. We have, as yet, learned no particulars. V'otks ar tiii way, in MiciimtN A vole was taken nn the cirs upon the Central Railroad in Michigan on the ;i th ult., winch resulted as f dlows ; For Taylor -III; for Cass!); For Van HurrnS. upon the subi nomination he accepts aa unconditionally, Why umi'd he not? Aud if he has not done right, what should he hive done ? It is far easier to find fuill with a man's course than it is to pomlout a better one. D" We reply In the Cleveland True Democrat, thai we knew of the existence of the following resolution when we charged the Free Moil men with having dropped abolition in Ihe District of Columbia from; their creed : j Rttolnd, Thai il ia the duly of the federal government lo relieve itself from all responsibility for the existence nr continuance "f slavery w herever that govern nl possesses constitutional authority to legislate on I hat subject, and is thus responsible for ils existence.Thie resolution requirea rontlruttia before it means what the Democrat saya it doea ; and that ia what we complain of. The whole trir ia Van Buremsh, snd may mean something or nothing, just as the fntu-e exigencies of Ihe parly may seem lo require. The very gloss which tho Democrat puts upon the resolution shows that il Is not clear. No one iat by it, bound lu do anything. Oen. A. Anderson, formerly a Demoerahe U. S Senator, from Tennessee, and who has, until recently tried with that party, has come out m favor of Gen. Taylor for the Presidency. and doublings of hia character, and show the people whose suffrage he is soliciting, what manner of man he is." The free soil Whigs of Western New York will not be seduced from their allegiance by the new 1 an 11 ten tomertrt 'I he Rochester American thus teahlies concerning Mourn county : "We have reliable advices from all parts of this county winch concur in the statement that very few indeed of the Whigs will withhold their support from Gen Taylor. In one or Iwo localities some disslfeo-tion has iieen nurtured by considerable effort on the part of the Barnburners, bul when it comes lo voting fr Martin Van Buren, the dse is much loo strong for W lug stomachs, nn art t form fit t ram alt quarter that lien Taylor will gain largtltf Jram Ms rankt of th Loeofiirot." Tnr Sandi'bkv Bnk Panic We understand that (he messengers sent up to Sandusky by some of our nty brokers have returned. The Sandusky nles are redeemed on demand. We hear nothing more to discredit the Norwalk llsnk, and all is qniei in relation to the Clinton Hank of Columbua. C'ntrianolt OauUet Sept, I EU The Anniversary of the K ittle of Bennington waa observed hy the citiiena of Vermont, upon the ground, with appropriate cere m"iuea. Tiif. S i a k k A in tiik Woonr r.i k v u. We have noticed in many places, a very wicked and very unprofitable practice, vil: lio s or men standing sentinel in orchards wilh a gnu hootutg wuodfeckera. In any country, snd particularly in Hits, where ore bur if are so poorly taken care of, the wnmp.ckcrs are of great advantage in the way of killing ins cts and wrm. Il was once thought tint thce birds picked into the Irilil tree for the purpose of getting the sap; if thai was the ease Ibey could find trees in our woods of native growth, containing sap much more pul.ilahle than can he found in our orrhnrds. The fjet is, they hunt after and destroy tnurh of the vermin that infest, and in very many casea kill, our most valuable fruit trees. When there are orchards very much infested wilh worms, the woodpeckers in all prohabdily cannot save it, hut doubtless (hey have saved many an orchard hy devouring the worms and insect lie t-.re they became mine nms. They are Ihe open enemies nf all llnxioua reptiles. Not long ago we Were riding by an orchard, and our alt- niiuii hub attracted by Ihe incessant clatter ot' some two or three dozen of these s.ipsuckers. We knew from the nature of the birds (list something unusual must he going on, and we hitched our horse and proceeded cuii-tioimly to the spot. On coming near we discovered a child, a bltle girl, asleep, we could hear oilier children nl a distance at play. On getting still closer we saw Ihe cause of Ihe buds' uneasiness; Ihere, within three feet nf the innocent one, lay coded up nnd striking at the birds sj they pounced down upon bun on every side, a large venomous serpent : we procured a large stick, and unperceived got a stroke al hmi,aml following it up with others soon dispatched him. The child had been at ptay with Ihe r-st, and becoming weaned, hail laid down and fallen anlorp Rut i ?tn on a II u i. Our city is full nf delegates representing Ihe Iwo Railroad moles Irmn this to Co lumhus. 'fhe strong men of ihe principal (owns through which Ihe routes pasasre hen lo presi nl their claims and oiler their inibieenienla in the way of increased subscriptions. Tins day was set apart by the directors to decide the line lite eastern or Ihe wes- nolalso be exceedingly interesting to the general rea- tern mule It may n be decided in diy.nsMr Kel- der ley, the Presnleni, is blork-ob d at Sandiuky, (the on- The labors of the Editor appear to hive been per I ly ual oral harbor on hake Erie,) and may not reach The I lurry at Albany. Like all premature movements excited by false information, when fully exposed by time and truth, tho treacherous sttempt upon Gen. Taylor in the Stale of New York, which produced the demonstration at Albany, is likely to end in adding strength lo Hint pa'iy which it was intended to destroy. Tho sober second Ihouglit of the good and true Whigs of Albany had its namrnl and legitimate effect, and so far from any force : being lost to Gen. Taylor, all accounts concur in showing that a gain has been realized, and a consolidation ol the party has been effected. Tho Albany Evening Journal, and tho correapon-dence of the New York city papera concur in npre-aentiug the adjourned meeting aa very spirited and harmonious. The New York Express says : The hall waa densely crowded, and the Whigs do-rived new euihusiaaiu from the temporary check inci-dent to the last ill advised, or umdviivd meeting, held on Saturday evening. The half hour speech of Mr. Collier, and the speeches of Messrs Wheaton, King of Geo , Kenselaer, were all eloquent and well received. We ve tho report as it was read, and received with every demonstration uf satisfaction by the meeting : n REPORT. The committee, to whom was referred the correspondence between Mr. Prinze, as chairman of a Tny-lor meeting in Charleston, S. C.aiid Gen. Taylor, respectively report, " That they have given the subject their careful and deliberate consideration, ami are led to believe that the respectable meeting, by whom your committee were appointed, have acted under some inisaiiiiielieu- sion as to the position assumed by Gen. Taolor in tins Correspondence. Il seems to have been stippnurd that tins nomina tion, communicated in the Pnugle letter, and accepted by Gen Taylor, emanated from a Whig ineeimir. who had repudiated the nomination of Millard Fillmore, our candidate for Vice President; and under that mi ssion, it might well be expected III it auch an acl of supposed treachery, on the part nf Southern Whigs, would hive provoked the just indignation of the Wings of the North, aud particularly of Ina friends and fellow Whigs in his own Stale II turned out, however, that Una nomination ,f Taylor aud Butler, in truih comes Iroin a body of seceding Locolocot, who have very properly discarded their own candidate, lien Cass, and put a better man in his place ; and thai Gen lay lor, in his answer, while he accepts Ihe nomina tion, professing on its face to come from the " Democratic citizens of Charleston," expressly tells them, uis aeceptiince is " without nledifi's or conditions. Your committee do not see m this letter of General Taylor, anything iiicnnmsLeul with the course he has uniformly pursued, and he was nominated at the Whig National Convention, with full knowledge of (he posi tion lie thus occupied. . If tins movement had pro. eeeded from seceding Whigs, who h id abandoned Mr. Fillmore, and rel'u-rd lo suppert him. it would have presented a verv different qu.-stioii. But we uifisl do Ihe South-m Wings the justice to say, lhat, so far as we are inlormed, they huve throiiLrhout anted with perfect good faith towards Mr. Fillmore ; and their wing hiuiiiTS aie nil, without a mule exception, hi scribed with the nim-'S nf "Taylor and Fillmore" tei not the Whigs ol .Vvr York Ihen. set the examine hid faith, who'll thev h ive been so e.nrer to con- de , in the mere anticipation of (hat disaffection which now proves never to huve existed among the Southern Wings. South Carolina housis of never hiving given anything hut a D'-mocrnlic vole, in thirty I ynnrs. "e Hive always conceded the vole ol that1 State to Cms and Butler Shall we out ourselves in a pisoon if Taylor shall help us lo a s,dil ticket in that Slate ? On ihe coutnry, ought we not to rejoice nl it, and he glud to compromise for such a vole i 1 our cooiMiitlee deem it the imperative duty of all Northern Whigs, and particularly of the Whigs of New Yom, Wtio have In en favored Willi Ihe nomina tion of a candidate from their own Slate for Vice President, to support mi good faith the nominees of the I'hihidelpln i Convention We are now to choow Ih-tween Taylor and Fillmore on the one hand, and Cass and Bjtler on the other. We all had our prel'i-renres, and our favorite cumlidates, for the nominations We hive many of us been gnevomly dinappomted in the remit. Hot Tivl-ir nnd Fillmore are now Hie onlv candidates of the Wing pirlv, and we surely ought not to hesitate to give that ticket our united support So long sn tlie higs of I he S .ul fi are true lo us, let us, without (littering, be true to Ihem "Your coiiimiiti-e hive, upon full consideration, unanimously agreed to submit tnd recommend lo tins meeting, tlie following rcnm j-m : " HiMolml, Tint the forih-T consideration of this subject be referred to the Wing State Convention, and tint we will cordially support the electoral ticket which that convention shall nominate. " All which is respectfully s ibmitted "John A Coi.i.iih, Fhanhi.in Townsf.nd, StMtKi. Hr;vr.Hs, Whmav ( i h '. k n k , II. A. Wii.imu, H ft. :Usw.i.i., ClUKI.ES S. Ol.SSTClJ, II G. WltkATON." Uniting the Free Democrat Nominations. Ihere are Ihise who stdl persist m remembering Mirtin Vim Buren as he was. T' men whose minds are clear and wh mo mem tries are sound, the lapse of ight years fi ts not obliterated Ihe record of the char ges which were op-nly proclaimed, of lh fra ids and crimes which were conclusively proved against hnn. I hese Dungs .ill stand mic mfcsjed, unrepealed of, tin atoned for. Thrown from h.s otfiae by the sciive in iignitioii of the p'ople, in the form of the worst and ui"t disgraceful defeat ever exHnenced by mortal man, he d es nol even ftrafrtt to hive changed in re sped of a suilrf practice, d iclnne or opinion. He is Mirtin Van Buren sill ; now, as ever, the bare. faced rider of the latest hobby tint cunning navigator who trims his sail to every popular mirreiti the migicun who trauslorms huuiell and yet remains the same. Whether the attempt to infnie galvanic life into a subject a ietr-ctiiiliy deadened, and ao justly aa was tliriin au tturen in lilit, is destined lu be success ful, is yet t ilwdom insir ited. Thai some who were Xecled tosustiut (he B.itfilo nominations are unable. now lluse nominations are mule lo do so, is becoming daily apparent. The following extract from a let-ler from Mr Siiaitxr, Ihe Secretary of State in Vermont, who was supp led lo be irrevocably committed to ine rree boil orguiixait m, exhibits, in g d set terms, his portion and doubtless Dial of thousands n others : I cannot bring myself to support a man for Press, dent who nif, rs m-iiner apology ,ur conlewiou fr hn pisl elf iic.ea, and who ha done more than any other iinn living, lo foster tint api-u of hold aggression on the pari of Slavery, winch annexed Texas lu ns iu lion, wilh all its coni qneiit evils. To eleri M trim Van Hunm, would be to reward Ihe whole band of minrnicioled men who. in InlJ ... .. menied the eilenl uf Slavery lu the lit t nf ttn-ir power, and brought upon us an unnecessary and bloody war, Icriinmtiiug at lnt in digging a pt o de-true i, from winch nothing but Ihe wnest ami .!, est of counsel can rescue us. Ttn re are niber and decisive reasons against Mr Van liuren His ps,lmii relative t Slavery itself, is entirely unsound, lie is against its talargrmmt, (ml can well tolerate the erittrnrt of il, in cases where Ihe same power is admitted lo exist or Us pri-veiHem and destruction. Further, he esnuoi be elected by the re-Miu is quite eviilcnt ; either Uem ral Daniel Webster out for Taylor. We take Ihe following from ihe telegraphic intelligence of iho Cleveland Plain Dealer of the 3d. It givea Ihe gratifying intelligence that anothor tried and trusted Whig leader has spoken out in terms that can neither be mistaken nor misconstrued, as to where ho stands, aud why he 1(,lds lin position : Nkw York, Sept. S-3 P.M. Mr Webster made s speech nt Mnrslilield yesl-rday and avowed himself fully and decidedly in favor of the election of Geri. Taylor, whom he considered fairly nominated. He did not believe that slavery had anything lo do with his nomination that the South waa noi accountable tor il. 1 he Iree States had sixty majority in Ihe Philadelphia Convention, and, if united, could have nominated who they pk-ascd. He consid. ered Hie contest for the Presidency lay between Taylor and Cass. Vnn Buren's past course he strongly reprobated, and said what was good ui the Unlt'ilo pi tit-form, the Whigs had always advocated, and lhat there were Whigs at the Ilulf ilo Convention whom he highly respected, hut he doubted the policy of the nomination of Van Buren. He held Cass to be the most dangerous man in the nation he was the embodiment of the war spirit he opposed Ihe treaty nf Washington he was for the whole nf Oregon. The mutter never could hove been peaceably negotiated if he (Cum,,) could have had hif way. He was for conlinuimr the Mexican war lie is all for war. Now, said Mr. W., we are to choose between Cass and Tavlor. One or Ihe other will bo lected no one else. It is to bo Tavlor or ( Inns Oen. Taylor has I u fairly nominated by the Whig Con vention e is a Whig. If I believed him, concluded Mr. W ,to be for war, or for tl xteusion of slavery, I should oppose hia election. I believe him to be in favor of neither. For Hie Ohio Stutu Journal, Chole.ru. Mkssrs. Editors : 1 have thought that even if it produce no very sensible elf-el, a tew remarka upon the great epidemic of (he llhli century might not be unacceptable to your readers. We taunt find leisure sometimes to think aud acl upon other questions thin mere p oincii ones, and experience w.ll, it may lie, teach us thai there are others of some importance. Alter slumbering soiling; in Russia, us to give us hopes liul it had breathed Us lat, the cholera is again on its fearful march. The central, and ere llns probably the Western portions of Furope, urn subject to its ravages. In nil human prohibility it will again cross the Atlantic, and ere another year Ins passed be once more m our miiUl. Columbus was severely V's-iled during the Ust epidemic and may be ajraiu. No losrtntine or cordons can check its progress, and we must prepare lo meet it n well us we can. What thult ire au ' To answer briefly this question is the main object of this coiiiuiunication. Though the cli'dern is olien-times exceedingly capricious, in Us march, and prevails occasionally iu the heiiltlnest situations, it is nevertheless true as a general proposition, thru it follows the same general course, and is amenable to th- nme laws of diffusion, as other epidemics. The British Com "'" era, appointed with direct reference lo the ex- peeled anproach of Ihe clrdera, iu lln-ir recent report say, that " the disease which may be taken as the type of the entire elms of euideunc dieast-s that infest ibis Bomitry ia typhus fever, Mm. fever ) The hshetat of typhus ia that of ihe class; and (be conditions which favor the ipread of llns disease, and which convert it into a pestilence, and those which locale to a very great extent in these very plice all other pestilences that come, and which give ihem ih-ir fearful fatality, are, na lar as we nave any knowledge of them, pre cisely Ihe Mine." Ivw. dark, damn, iHv ventilated houses, crowded cellars, stagnant courts, all (end to produce ty phus, and all invite and aggravate cholera. Tlie ship ttver which co iiontted such terrible hi von in our emigrant ships last year, ia scarcely s-en this, solely on account of ihe rigid eiil'.rceuient of the pmeiig.-r lnu which require venlilhlion, Mriet rlennlim-ss, aud a certain mi. uber of cubic feet for each passenger. The same principles are Irue everywhere, and we have the gral lying assurance that while we are endeavoring lo mo led ourselves from one disease, we place ourselves ui the most favorable condition lo resist all. Lest llns communication should extend itself lo loo grral a length, I will confine myself now to those sanitary measures winch should bL adopted by us as a citv, leaving individual precautions fur a future paper, nr lube inferred. Columbus is not a filthy city. We have but little of thai excessive crowding sod ebject novertv found in Kuropeau, and to noiue extent in our Kasternciiics Our foreign population, as well as native, suit'-r l ut tt'tle fr cold, or damp, or want .Now and then us everybody can aee, there is a dwelling crowded, close and dirty enough in contaminate a whole neighborhood. A Board of Health,"' composed o men who know something of the Jaws of health, snd the sanitary measures su successfully adopted elsewhere, should th' eleeied every year, and sustained in the fun hi ii I d'sclnr.,' of ttnir duty. Bol I wish especially locill the attention of our cit-ixe ns lo another great sanitary measure of more importance thin everything else, and until the adoption of wlneh, many port four city will be almost tie. cessitnly unhealthy; I allude to a regular system of drainage. Those who hive paid no attention In the subject, are noi aware how much depends upon (Ins. Without it London was almost d- p 'poUlrd every few years ; with it London has become as healthy as any city of its sue can w. ll be. The nrf.il o a single family, if allowed to collerl and aecuiilillale, Will poison the air for a considerable dislance. and nothing contri butes more In comfort, as well as to health, than its prompt and complete removal Many ol our families hive no drain hut Ihe street gutter, aiid, with the best disposition to b neat and cleanly, are a perfect nuisance to ibeuiselves and lo each other. A projeet is on fool, and we hope it will lie successful, to provide a quiet and beautiful resting place for the dead. Tina is well, bul I do insist thai if we can do but one, we sli uld tit-sl provide for Ihe health and comfort of the living Provide means for the thorough draining of every street, aye, nf every house in Ihe city, and compel every family lo use them, and Green Lawn Cemetery will be cheated of many a victim; and for myself I would ri'her be instrumental in bringing about auch a result, thin lo sleep under the proudest inomrne nt that art can renr. A common sewer should piss either the length of Fourth street or its neighborhood, north and south, or probably belter still, a unny as are necessary irotn Sixth sired, or thereabouts in tin river, pa-smg under High street A l-1 tT descent could be obtained in tb s way, aud Bide drama could be let in from every street and into these from every house. 1 do n il suggest this as the lh-t plin, but In give our cilil-'iis something to think of. A caicfol survey should of course In mule. If the importance of (he subj. ct w-re properly under-toml, a special lax Would at once lie laid and cheerfully pud, and the work entered on before another week hid pissed. Our slreels are wide and airy aud we have but little, couipirativ. lv, lo do If these s igfestmns are acted on, sml if individuals will consult mote than tle-y now ifo the p-Mir.-ples ol's.-ieiiee in Hie construction of their dwellings, we should soon rvap the betn His in a unrk-ed diminution of sickness of every description Tho' these measures might seusdily d nisli our business, I sssiire you lie ir consummation would atfurd sincere gratification to at least one PHYSICIAN. Knurl the New Voik F.ipress, A Tnlk to Sincere Whig. Ni w York, Aug 3-1, S. The antiearanee of Mr Van l!,ir..i.'. i..n..r r. n lor must he elected bv the -tee tor it I oi,ll...n. or b excuse lor a few words on ibti i. ...... l it. Cast Will be chosen by the House ol Rcpr-sentalivca words" because, although the teller IS exceedingly Pins I consider ihe greatest evil that could "all upon I wordy, ils art aud delusiveness can be exposed in a few the country. The success of himself and pirty will seiib nces. give us Slavery throughout th,. conquered porinma of I II ia enough to say to Whigs that Mr. Van Buren Mexico, lor a lime we cannot foresee, a general svs advances Homing, nf tnslorv. annnm-iil. or anneal, in lem ol misrule a farther prostration of free labor illustration of tne design of the trainers of our Com ui snort, we 1(11111 receive Iron il the twin plagues, Slavery and Modern Progressive Democracy. I cannot consent in llns crisis In wile even mm ' me " peculiar institution . in support of Ihe power of Congress over Ihe slave question in Ihe territories, or in behalf of a resolute resistance to formed with much ability. Although he con testes tint he docs nol feel altogether at home, we must adintllhat we see no evidence of the want of a home feeling except in the confession itself; for toils Ihe pages Which are the products of Ins nvrn pen, are among the uioit interesting of the whole. F.ach number of the Journal ia lu contain ninety six pages, and it isntfi'red to subscribers at the very moderate rate of two dollars per annum, in advance. Cnsi Ihe Toetutitler. Commodore Klholl, the commander nf the U. 8. ship Constitution, in the Mediterranean, addressed a letter to Gen. Cass, then at Paris, on the eve nf Ins commencing his lour lo Greece, Fgypl and Ihe Holy Land, on board thai ship, aud al the Government expense, which contained the following; " As to wines, I have directed at Ibis plare, one cask of Sherry and one cak of Madeira: Ihe Cham paigne and the other French wines yon mm torn, will best come from Marseilles." Gen. Cass manufactured whiskey tntrlt. e never lasted arrfrnf tointt in Ina life. I he wine, no doubt, was for sickneiB; and lie must have expected In be rrryxt'rA, judging from the quantity of mrrfirinc lie laid in. t say ; here before to-morrow. Bul when the decision is made, then ch ar Ihe track ! The contract to build Ihe road, grading, laying down the iron, furiiMiing csrs, locomotives, &o , Ac, is already made, nnd a company from Ihe enst ahuudantly able to do it, are under liotiils lo complete me nn no in rwo Vftrt. I here ia no misuse- anoui uiisi Again we clear the (rack !" Cierthnid $rpt I. 1 NTKFFiniTV or A Lht A remarkable instance of intrepidity and coolness was exhibited t Ihe Blue I ,iclt Springs, a lew tin s ago, ny ,llss L , a belle of Bourbon connlv in this Slate. Miss L and Mr. V . a gentleman from the South, on tin ir return from an excursion on borsebnek, were riding down the long bill about a quarter nf a mile from the hotel, t full speed, the lady being a little ahead. At a sudden turn of the road, the gentleman's saddle turned, and he fell from his horse, but his foot remained in the stirrup, and Hie horse, although Ins pace was somewhat slackened, kept on his way, dragging Ihe fallen man upon ihu ground. The young ladv, seeing tins, reined in her own horse by a sudden ell'rt, Icupcd from hm, whilst In was still in rapid motmn, ran haek,seticil the oiher horse by (be bridle, and released her gallant from his perilous aitunli m This feat was witnessed br hnndredsal the Springs, whofloiild find no words strong enoiiyh to express their admiration of the during conrage o the beautiful young heroine. LmsurWc Journal. vote Ihe it me reason which impelled me lo v Me I H xWnsion o humsn bondage, wlneh dues li"l b.f Mr. I lay, are equally binding u .w, and unerring- j i'h a cordial response from tint Wing parly with ly o support the nomint f (he V big pilty. j Vthoin Ihe lion extension of sltvery his ever been a As an anli. slavery man, and an aiioliimnisl, I do cherished p obey Nonot a tie. iijht iiol one ! Oar tmt perceive how 1 can belter aid the gn at cause of ( Views and teachings on this question hive ever been hum in liberty, Hun by assisting topr,iinic the chain j sound, conservative, cimcilnl .-ry. I be rr of S,,Hlk-perns nf its gn at aiitagmiiii. tn ii. nl Taylor is a i e rn Uaig in Me Hunt of li iTt$itHtiri on the V. slaveholder; beyond this whatever is known of hnil ; ate 1 ompmmttr, W, is worthy n renewed attention 111 a to Ins advantage. 1 order hoti.even with this lib.i to any Northern dougliLtee trusting In U admitted j iiilegnty as a man, ami more eapeeuilt I the per mi a- j lie uce of W lug counsels which hit election will secure, to shield us from the further rtl'.-cts of Democratic elf rts to extend the ' area of freedom." This is my position. lours truly, J Mi. M SIlAr'Ttlll. Burlington, Aug W, nh Mr. Polk's tariff is making sad work among the Pennsylvania imn interests. A letter lu Hie Pin la-delpbot News, from Danville, sais: " The Rolling Mill and all the furnaces in DanvilhA. Prim , are closed, and at less! ttiM workmen thrown out of employment Si sly four of Ihe company's Houses are empty, and linlt the remaining loU w ill be so in a few days." Ilerrwo Fun Among the sltractions to tins grea cattle show, the Ilulfilo Conner notices ten stud fnr sea of a peculiar breed from Canada. Tlie Republic, the Bariiburiiing piper also gives no lice Hut Mr. Van Bur. n and Ins son John wdl lie there, Stalls having been taken al the Mansmn. ( tereUnd lit raid Ciiopriin nrr llnio- IV .Vr York Courier and Fnqnirer has been inlormed that H ii F. Ilntler t.sq , tinted Silica Attorney I'T thai District, Ins tins connection But on llns question, as it now arises, there is a dilXcieiice, and a wide difference between the conduct and nib gniy nf Maitui Van Buren, aud the acts and motives o Wings. All men concede lint the present agitation of llns topic hts its foundation m (he annexation of Texas in its incident, ihe Mexican war fruits. The whole subject was before Mntiii Van Uuren in ample time for hnn to have resisted tlie evil when resist nice would lave Iieen patriotism. Hut lei il be noted, lhat in 111, when Henry City stood on the cb vsted platform ) his Rihigh letter, and when the wh.de energ f Ihe lug pirty ol tlie nation Were aroused and put forth to resist thai destructive S oniiern acquisition, Mnrlui Van Buren, formally, puldicly, threw Ihe Weight of Ina inlloeiiee into the scale o war, conquest snd slave extension ! Aud now, when Hie frightful evil whe-h he aud Ins allies ill New York might have prevented, by mi opposition to J lines K P.dk, is on us m all itr force, In- a chief culprit he, denetvmg as he does, in cnniiomi Willi all oile r Co workers in iniquity, (lie he.nty con. deniiiatiou of every patriotic hesil, iiist. ad ol it dmg Ins face in shame, pii-sumcs to make a virtue o Ina past prostitution u mllueiiee, and a.-ks the I'n solciiey, at Wing hands, aa a n-wsid lor Ins penitence, sup pose for the very evils whx-tt he his anted lo bung upon Ins country ! Martin an Buren appears before he's with nrcoolfiils anil Mi sla ili.l. it I'r.xn llu. been removed, and John McKvun, F.sq , appmiiU d in j bps ol our lenders, winch so vainly weie urged against his place. htmsi-ll and associates, in resistance In Ihu calamities which he and they have brought upon the nation .. t with n coolness winch Satan himself miyhienvv ask. J J Jn regard h.m a. an angel of ,glt !tts BOfi T Z ;LJ'?'i"ljr' wham H"."1 resurreclion ha. b n vou , . fed as a prov.dent.al boon to rescue Ihe conn-l y I . .. peril ! Wo, AIr Van ji.iren- no! Tl,i.efll t try-7,: ::;;Tctbm h -nd ::m3atT thai disappointed an5 Z" he. u& not a si tore i.i.i m.,,i . oui mere uirKs Permitted a u.un cl..r...i.uJ . ' ." UK'" Jour . vU...u,uni a, to your UJ0. l?.!i"I..'"d,,"""el""! M.r Vw '""i """t lie Ihe relrosnrri. i .i.uu m...: ir i. .ill. H,l,er prin.ifc."rtrvS: br..k tl,,, .' 1 ," r .. ' ,""V"r " ",e " limii,. Zi', . ! I'!""?'"1 "r ..in ...... . - ' "'""'W, ai.a iu nnlird .villi .Vim di-clarnll I .r l II. '. ..V' V" in.,r,,tn.,v,.i,,,,, oi im, ., f,,u,ld," ,;; Willis, tri.ru our rrtrih. i "" J 'T 'IT ? r i"d"c'' "f "' '" d" '"" , r ."i, w.r. ui.i,ii,nir,t.d and , ' " "- me iinuiminei and snot. ' A ""."V. "I',' ""l'"rl1"1 '"' ' rv of Wl. . . I . '"' "..IM... I.rtw,.,.,, i. ,;. ryol Wliij, ,dtlal rmr,i vn Uu.n .,, TT? ""!' b"'"'1'1 111 ""c,.. I.,, , ...HIIH.J. winch ,ch ,,, tilMI,t. .;,, ul Tl,,. Vn llnr , - : V nn oririir.iml n ivliicli , - , " M "ie election o f,,,,.,, herH In I lire- w ., u.,ii ,.; i... u .. . ,. . " 1 7 unniMi states Senate. .,lly.lrl,..lll.l,j,.ct, ,, iv,,i -,v, T. p.., w a .iiiiiU, ,)ri:,i,z,tin , C.,K., ,i ,vl, vllluH Wll ,. , p,,,.,,, f ll,'liri..,.i iiLiv... -l ' .. . ' 1 ii a.. ,i,r B rre.uU'nitui rlv - r ..7 coiiirarv, ask lor t be har- T"r "f " 1 , it,,. eur;.., ,.,.;;;. " y in' r-it-ricd In i i ,i r.i., ne e mir. !.,. I... . . rrn.,,,1. I re,u,d, nnll,,,,,, ,e but hi. S- ,r. KlUNKr.niT, Kv , Seat 1, rile rrn-.t nw an I h-,... ' . n.ilinnlKiti itnip.....iu tl k,i.i a..: i . .-.....,,. ' " 1' 'I1"'1 r. uuniu d,-,,.,.n,.,, a,,j .""ir v.ir.,.na C.-l.-if rn(,ti.. p.pli, ill .,1,1,1,,,,, , ,e ,. c-....,la T,.,.r, ''""' '.'"1. w-re ll w,,,k , ,.,,! ',,y .Mr. Ilarilea mi.. ,.r tl . .. ' . .... ,,, ,,. mVn . . . I Mill.. ...... telegraph, who reiim-ated i'mf.-aur M..f. i.. Biiv errors, if errors it. r ,..n.i ... .t. . . . , . , ' - io no-ex H:inaiioiii, olid a siiuilrr r,nii.ui i . i... . .. ' 1 rolessor Morse n n li..H tl. .1 1 ..... .. ... .. 1 - " r uiu iiui kiiow liiai lie had any llmig 1.) tnv. Morse 0d Kendall persist in claiming a monopoly of Wtr...lagilel.sin...rTeleirra,.h.cpurpos.... ' Kiel y . counsel re.,.1 Ihe claim of ,.,..1.,,y ,.. vers grounds ; nH,- il. want of or.g'uah.y, snd rands connected with the pa.r,, while also sin w , " " ' usee on uie U llielly f,iue he. twee,, L..ois.e and N,-w Orleans, u .,,.1 a., improve - ' -o u uy rr saor or-e. The same counsel a U.. B...ri 11. . .1 , . l nioiMipoiy 01 a gene ;:in.,:::,c,i,:';," tb '- I he (fenoslf ion an. I i . ... .viiim-iiif aireauy sutiimlteU would form a large volume Tlie whole I1..M .. ..1..-. 1 . . . 1 1 l uiscoverv is brought in on Hi I ',,",'!,lil.,w ar,1 P"-iil case, are atudn d The oucglion nl i.... , .. .1.. . ....... ,,u.-r un. case one ol tlie ,.i.t..i.p..rl.,tev,T tried in America. Power ol InMlnct. c . , , Cii,K,ii.T.,, O., April SI. On Paturtliv ln.l ' . ' . Inking l,.,lay ,, i,cl i Hl, A "T ""11,,,"',d 'U'Mnl to III,. V1aie, wc c,i, f,,ttu. it ti,.d , r,.w ,.,; bl wl,, , .tie,,,,,! ,,!,. , Ui Wllh u ,1uii Miiii( ,"" "y wli.rn 11 oae nded t Ilia l..p with q,l li,..., ,d H off l the l,k of oilier, winch ,t ,. .,,,,d t i,.i,,,,,d ,!. , , anollip. It ... .... . ... " " " toroen wiui Boldness, and win e the lo. was bi'iiitr p.ii ..tr ...i .1.. . . . 1 . .. e 1 ' " on ope,,, II lot ereU absuit the feet of ih,,.,. .-.., ... ....,.... Willi an iirmmiinitl n.i.., ... V. , ., . . 1 i"" "", inwn jrfirning llie 1I.111-iferof the fa niir.iiH. .......... .. .. ... , ., , " ""-o ii ireu ieiuiy nisseu ...10 the lt. IH,.. ,l,e lg ltrJ .! ,. ,1. M and tw.m,,, llr M wrn !,(.,, , w,lh c.re, nd h,d d .wn lo her, .he Bi.,rd one up w.ll, her piw. ,, , ,d,., bulk, ;.d , K,,.r. ed pin. w,th her ,,ill,, r,., d the ..,e tree .l,e Inrl pre,m.ly tni. ,,,,, f h, i(Jm n tl to another, .i,.l . ,,, ij1(. ,dlhe younir " ' , , """ ai.e ...on renin.,, I, ..III III like manner l,H,lt BUI.H . . .. same place She seemed to lack however in n.l,,.N. Imn, and returned again, eiamined the place minute. v : but hiiilin.r , r 1 - . . -r progeny, sue went tlie same directum, and relumed no nn.re fteajfuue. Pnsanitea In Ihe VirKinln Legislnlure. A Mr. Lee. niKmh-r ..r .1.- u . "": ""B" 01 .-g,ues, wore a wig, with a long queue, m Ihe old fas 11 A waggish brother member, (lloberls, of Cul eper.) dty aiw Lee wriggling 111 Ins seat aud truig lo cut. h Ihe Speakers eye, that lie mihl riss and make H SIH'eCll. It dell.Ti.nlv i..A ..... t 1. e .1. . 1 ,r iruv in in.' 111 111 hack o the bench nn which L sal, and su h tin nil uiat nousesuon, tut wilhin the last ten or twelv, Vrars 'I ho iu.tI m, ... . . and Mr Lee rose, eagerly eielmiiiitnr : Mr Sneaker!" hoi 1. tr . ... 1 '"ifto lloberls, he in the same breath cried oui, "y.m r I'he House roared, of course, Mr l,..,Ur..i ... " ., . . " "'- ne 1 niir; ami, there os-mg no biismess jroing nn, pull, d' out some bum notes, and bet'n lo count ilixm C........1 ih....l. . rose and snid ; .Mr. Sneaker. I nmn ilni tl..... n.jf. l 1 1 , , . - ..... .ii,, ate Ullll IMJ 1,-llQ t I),))) Ihe Inble. 1 ll...1.1ri.l.. I....11.. I... I It 1 . ... ttjr iiuooien ,ns lines into Ins pocket. anl said," I he gentleman from Uath is out of order !' A bishful metnlier rfrmn Amrusta. I iho.k , i make Ins maiden speech, on some local quea ntcr- n " ioustiiueiiis, anu tiegnn : "Mr. S.teiiker! what shall I mv in ents 1" and then, unable lo utter anolliHr syl,,bb-, stood. ... )- n(i..n, ue suipetactioii ol terror. "im n.oini, leaning lorwartl in h al, said, in vIiisjmt audible all over Ihe use, 'Ul , 'led to make a speech I" The ooor vieim. t t.Lh. fulness sunk down upm the bench, and never at-tempted lu speak altertvardi. When Ihe lali fl..,n... . " ""oor wss apeiiKer, a member from .. So,,th-,de c tv (whom I shall ell Mr Kyle) rose to speak, un m cusloii.ed, permtps it .is his ma, den speeeh e whs Very much in ..ve Willi ItlH he VI... ! .... .. " oiir;iV, iiilOifllter Ol r. tournv, w no was also a m-mtn-r Mr. K b. g ui ; 'Mr Speaker! I rise frcighled With op.mous loo lug lor Utterance, yet I 11 tons and t nulid- he Sin. ores. e, t " fll.h, 11 !.'.,. . . lull 1 'lim yonder c s lr F.iUrtv ! ' and down .ir sit, wnh-int fmiher power of utterauee The Sll.-lk.-r Ur.lh.a.r l.t rl,..U.. I. I : 1 ' vioimrr.isoi''iii, and, r.tllv Ins tsintiiig spirit, railed out, "Mr R le lias tin-11 i..r , Mr K- herenp in rose again, and o.tl Mr Speaker! The grandest thoughls were in my MINI, I ih.H ll !.. ,.!..,. .1 , . J omi nif soul 10 conceive i t"lt' ,,r- 1 ' "W un. f, in.l I., the great loss of mnii- konl. they were entirely dissipated by the euliaoee of Mr tuuray ! lie sal down, and SUoke nn umr ll.ai session. 1 ne na.iiia sm ru.......i n.:. 1 . .. . . - u " -fco.-u u tins aoccuoir, outttntrn Literary Muttngrr. ......ir,, Hm iitiKKR 11 is aiatea tliat the wile ami danghvr of Lititte, ihe French It inker, m ho J j in nit" tiirone 01 r r.lllCe, Mil.- ved at New York steerage pusseng. rs It w il 1 . c since. Thev arc said lo hove brouk.,i .,. vakil'.!-pioperly with them, and pr- bibty iMine 111 the steer lge for Ihe purpose uf cmictvlmeiit. A very largeVig nrgaiimlion meeting was heblh iu II it 'ii 011 ruesilay, ami was addn-ssi d 111 an side, manly and m"l are, piable manner by the llu ,h...it Lawrence, lichgates io the Woreesi.-r tVuventn n w,'r' "I'l tted, tho lion It .b.-rl C. Wiiithropli. ad nig the list. m a ititir.n. At London. Ohio, t.n iim ,tnii ultimo, hv the Rv. Mr, rq,.rtHig Mr. Join StoCKTO?! 10 .MlU Mlhlllt J sl-r MiJirn. hotli of this city. On this iiiornuw tbeotb iot , bv tlie Hrv tieo, (' I'u . Mr 1 ham 11 U a K it 1 s tu Mis AUiauAHkr Suihii.tui . this city.